jueves, 29 de noviembre de 2012

[Vídeo] Adele y el bosón de Higgs


El Gran Colisionador de Hadrones (LHC) cada vez se acerca más a la confirmación definitiva de la existencia del bosón de Higgs.


Un hito en la física que bien merece una canción de Adele, Rolling to the deep, para darle un poco más de empaque. El montaje y la letra es de Tim Blais and y a Capella Science. Y, si bien el tipo desafina un poco, la letra de la canción está muy conseguida.


Ésta es la transcripción:



There’s a collider under Geneva

Reaching new energies that we’ve never achieved before

Finally we can see with this machine

A brand new data peak at 125 GeV

See how gluons and vector bosons fuse

Muons and gamma rays emerge from something new

There’s a collider under Geneva

Making one particle that we’ve never seen before


The complex scalar

Elusive boson

Escaped detection by the LEP and Tevatron

The complex scalar

What is its purpose?

It’s got me thinking


Chorus:

We could have had a model (Particle breakthrough, at the LHC)

Without a scalar field (5-sigma result, could it be the Higgs)

But symmetry requires no mass (Particle breakthrough, at the LHC)

So we break it, with the Higgs (5-sigma result, could it be the Higgs)


Baby I have a theory to be told

The standard model used to discover our quantum world

SU(3), U(1), SU(2)‘s our gauge

Make a transform and the equations shouldn’t change


The particles then must all be massless

Cause mass terms vary under gauge transformation

The one solution is spontaneous

Symmetry breaking


Roll your vacuum to minimum potential

Break your SU(2) down to massless modes

Into mass terms of gauge bosons they go

Fermions sink in like skiers into snow












Vía Xatakaciencia

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario