Berliner Boersenzeitung - Peter Higgs: physicist who predicted 'God particle'

EUR -
AED 4.09844
AFN 76.83586
ALL 99.089905
AMD 432.002035
ANG 2.007856
AOA 1035.248441
ARS 1074.344472
AUD 1.638661
AWG 2.008525
AZN 1.893024
BAM 1.952645
BBD 2.249466
BDT 133.1349
BGN 1.952645
BHD 0.419822
BIF 3229.681956
BMD 1.115847
BND 1.439574
BOB 7.698562
BRL 6.154006
BSD 1.1141
BTN 93.116256
BWP 14.727206
BYN 3.646009
BYR 21870.604702
BZD 2.245672
CAD 1.513875
CDF 3203.596944
CHF 0.949519
CLF 0.037544
CLP 1035.955103
CNY 7.868838
CNH 7.863816
COP 4635.206863
CRC 578.066046
CUC 1.115847
CUP 29.56995
CVE 110.087137
CZK 25.069965
DJF 198.389472
DKK 7.458914
DOP 66.871958
DZD 147.446777
EGP 54.143139
ERN 16.737708
ETB 129.282025
FJD 2.455759
FKP 0.849783
GBP 0.838319
GEL 3.04616
GGP 0.849783
GHS 17.514702
GIP 0.849783
GMD 76.439037
GNF 9625.448619
GTQ 8.612086
GYD 233.06345
HKD 8.693621
HNL 27.636349
HRK 7.586657
HTG 147.002495
HUF 393.006904
IDR 16917.359076
ILS 4.220039
IMP 0.849783
INR 93.159124
IQD 1459.442049
IRR 46968.795211
ISK 152.101006
JEP 0.849783
JMD 175.037201
JOD 0.79058
JPY 160.821451
KES 143.711755
KGS 93.997292
KHR 4524.689674
KMF 492.479286
KPW 1004.261828
KRW 1487.446408
KWD 0.340411
KYD 0.9284
KZT 534.147004
LAK 24601.252923
LBP 99767.610207
LKR 339.910822
LRD 222.82
LSL 19.558301
LTL 3.294807
LVL 0.674965
LYD 5.290452
MAD 10.802747
MDL 19.440591
MGA 5038.858955
MKD 61.515612
MMK 3624.22811
MNT 3791.648663
MOP 8.942951
MRU 44.274468
MUR 51.195339
MVR 17.138946
MWK 1931.679078
MXN 21.635702
MYR 4.687244
MZN 71.247233
NAD 19.558301
NGN 1802.662425
NIO 41.003752
NOK 11.702003
NPR 148.98629
NZD 1.789722
OMR 0.429057
PAB 1.1141
PEN 4.175853
PGK 4.360954
PHP 62.080156
PKR 309.55267
PLN 4.269415
PYG 8691.956818
QAR 4.061738
RON 4.989403
RSD 116.898133
RUB 103.401129
RWF 1501.873494
SAR 4.187163
SBD 9.269272
SCR 14.55748
SDG 671.196271
SEK 11.351558
SGD 1.440826
SHP 0.849783
SLE 25.494098
SLL 23398.751675
SOS 636.67136
SRD 33.704207
STD 23095.783712
SVC 9.74825
SYP 2803.599441
SZL 19.565389
THB 36.811555
TJS 11.842866
TMT 3.905465
TND 3.375746
TOP 2.613427
TRY 38.108792
TTD 7.577757
TWD 35.711596
TZS 3041.485868
UAH 46.048502
UGX 4127.331666
USD 1.115847
UYU 46.035622
UZS 14177.094741
VEF 4042215.025119
VES 41.104208
VND 27455.419831
VUV 132.475619
WST 3.121541
XAF 654.898911
XAG 0.035916
XAU 0.000426
XCD 3.015633
XDR 0.825666
XOF 654.898911
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.324446
ZAR 19.421431
ZMK 10043.986022
ZMW 29.495346
ZWL 359.302336
  • BCC

    -7.1900

    137.5

    -5.23%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    69.55

    +1.04%

  • SCS

    -0.3900

    12.92

    -3.02%

  • RBGPF

    58.8300

    58.83

    +100%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    40.8

    -2.01%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.44

    -0.35%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    78.38

    -0.66%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    32.64

    -0.37%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    63.57

    -2.53%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.32

    -0.6%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    25.02

    +0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.99

    -0.29%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    35.04

    -0.43%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.97

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

Peter Higgs: physicist who predicted 'God particle'
Peter Higgs: physicist who predicted 'God particle' / Photo: Fabrice Coffrini - POOL/AFP/File

Peter Higgs: physicist who predicted 'God particle'

Nobel laureate Peter Higgs gave his name to one of the great scientific discoveries of the last century, earning a place alongside Albert Einstein and Max Planck in physics textbooks.

Text size:

Through ground-breaking theoretical work, Higgs, who died on Monday aged 94, helped explain how the Universe has mass, resolving one of the greatest puzzles in physics.

His 1964 theory of a mass-giving particle, which became known as the Higgs boson or the "God particle", earned him and Belgian physicist Francois Englert the 2013 Nobel Prize for Physics.

But when the announcement for which he had been waiting for half a century came, the unassuming physicist was nowhere to be found, having slipped out his back door into a pub, according to the 2022 biography "Elusive".

Higgs later admitted that the sudden fame was "a bit of a nuisance".

Announcing his death on Tuesday, the University of Edinburgh -- where he had taught and researched in various capacities since the 1950s -- hailed him a "great teacher and mentor".

It said he had inspired "generations of young scientists".

- 'Oh shit, I know...' -

The Higgs boson confers mass on some of the fundamental particles that make up matter.

Without it, theorists explain, we and all the other connected atoms in the universe would not exist.

Shy and unassuming, Higgs had seen the light almost half a century before the particle's existence was confirmed by the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva in July 2012 in the Large Hadron Collider.

He realised in a eureka moment as a young lecturer in 1946 there could be a field of novel particles that confers mass.

"He said: 'Oh shit, I know how to do that!'" former colleague and friend Alan Walker told AFP of the breakthrough as recounted to him by Higgs.

Higgs published a paper on his theory in 1964, becoming the flag bearer of a premise to which several scientists had contributed over the years, including Englert, but which, at the outset, found few backers.

Particularly sceptical was CERN, which embarked on a years-long, multi-billion-dollar quest to find the needle-in-a-haystack particle, culminating in its own eureka moment on July 4, 2012.

Higgs was present in Geneva to hear CERN announce that it had found a particle "consistent" with the elusive boson.

"It's very nice to be right sometimes. It has certainly been a long wait," he declared.

He and Englert won a slew of awards for their work, including the prestigious Wolf Prize in 2004.

But Higgs revealed he had turned down a knighthood, saying he felt the British honours system was "used for political purposes."

- 'Gentle' -

Higgs was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, in northeastern England, on May 29, 1929, to a Scottish mother and an English father who worked as a sound engineer at the BBC.

He studied at King's College in London, gaining a PhD in 1954, and went on to lecture at Edinburgh University.

Balding and ruddy-cheeked, he retired in 1996 and continued to live quietly in the Scottish capital, where he was emeritus professor of theoretical physics.

A modest man, who published only around a dozen scientific papers over his career, he cringed every time the term "Higgs boson" was used in his presence.

But as a life-long atheist, he disliked the "God particle" even more.

"He is a very mild-mannered and very gentle man, but he actually does get a little tenacious if you say something wrong that (has to do with) physics," his former colleague and friend Walker once said.

Others credited with contributing to the Higgs theory include Americans Gerald Guralnik, Carl Hagen, and Briton Tom Kibble, who jointly did a separate paper on the mechanism in the same year as Higgs.

Higgs married American linguist Jody Williamson, with whom he had two children. The pair later separated but remained close until her death in 2008 of leukemia.

He campaigned against nuclear weapons, joining a call in 2015 for Britain to abandon its Trident nuclear deterrent.

(O.Joost--BBZ)