"Candidate Higgs boson events from collisions between protons in the LHC" (Wikipedia, Higgs Boson
Higgs Boson is one of the most difficult objects for observers. The short existence of the Higgs Boson means. That there is a very short time to make observations. Higgs Boson may have a spin. But the Higgs Boson's spin is hard to detect because the existence of that particle is so short.
Higgs Boson is the highest energy and shortest living particle that can change how we understand physics. The decay itself is the thing that gives information about things like WARP bubbles and other kinds of things. When ultra-high energy particles come into the environment, whose energy level is the same as it is on Earth it sends an energy pulse.
That energy pulse forms a shockwave that will not let outside quantum fields affect to Higgs Boson or any other high-energy particle. The bubble exists and expands until that shockwave's energy level is lower than the environment. There is an electromagnetic vacuum that pulls energy away from that particle. And this energy flow rips Higgs Boson into pieces.
The thing is that researchers are not sure about the shape of the Higgs Boson. The thing is that researchers have seen some kind of flexing or anomalies in the shape of the Higgs Boson. And that thing causes theories that this boson involves some, even more, smaller and higher energy particles. There is another thing about the Higgs Boson and that thing is that some researchers are not sure, if this Higgs Boson is the same boson, that Higgs predicted.
Some people say. This Higgs Boson is found in too low energy levels. The prediction was that the Higgs Boson could be found in the energy level that can form in an asteroid belt-size particle accelerator. But the LHC accelerator found that particle, called Higgs Boson. The thing is that there is a prediction or theory that between photons and Higgs Bosons is only one or at least a couple of particles. But can we find those particles? That is the key question about the physics.
https://bigthink.com/hard-science/higgs-boson-decay/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higgs_boson
https://learningmachines9.wordpress.com/2024/02/08/higgs-boson-decay-might-revolutionize-physics/
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