Experiments conducted at the Tevatron particle accelerator at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois seem to indicate that a new particle has been found. A paper posted on the laboratory’s website Monday brought out this point. Stripped of the scientific terminology, it says there’s a bump in mass. That could point to a new particle, possibly a non-standard boson. If a new particle has indeed been discovered, it would mean that most of our ideas about what is beyond the standard model of elementary particle physics are wrong, said Lawrence M. Krauss, foundation professor at ASU’s School of Earth and Space Exploration.
It is the Planck mass in a hyperspace co-dimension where the speed of light is 1 meter/second. The mass is 135.86 GeV/cc. Even though Einstein is credited with the discovery of hyperspace, this constitutes a verification of co-dimensions. The first wormhole was produced by the Magnetic Vortex Wormhole Generator at least a decade before this experiment.
Tevatron Experiment Could Send Particle Physicists Back to the Drawing Board
Posted by: Richard Adhikari April 7, 2011 03:13 PMExperiments conducted at the Tevatron particle accelerator at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois seem to indicate that a new particle has been found. A paper posted on the laboratory’s website Monday brought out this point. Stripped of the scientific terminology, it says there’s a bump in mass. That could point to a new particle, possibly a non-standard boson. If a new particle has indeed been discovered, it would mean that most of our ideas about what is beyond the standard model of elementary particle physics are wrong, said Lawrence M. Krauss, foundation professor at ASU’s School of Earth and Space Exploration.