YES鈥 no鈥 yes鈥 maybe. The Large Hadron Collider is back in business but the Higgs boson is proving as elusive as ever, teasing us with hints of its existence before fading away again.
If you鈥檝e got Higgs fatigue, join the club. Some physicists worry that by fixating on it and other 鈥渒nown unknowns鈥, such as supersymmetry, the LHC might be missing other, more interesting, particles (see 鈥淚s the LHC throwing away too much data?鈥). By all means, hunt the Higgs 鈥 but not to the exclusion of other particles (see 鈥11 particles that could change the cosmos鈥).
Meanwhile, the name 鈥淗iggs鈥 might soon (partially) disappear. Peter Higgs was one of six physicists who came up with the idea in 1964 and moves are afoot to share the recognition. So we鈥檙e no longer hunting the Higgs but the much more exotic-sounding Englert-Brout-Higgs-Guralnik Hagen-Kibble particle.
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