Fermions: Massless? Higgs & LEP Results Explained

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of fermion masses in relation to the Higgs mechanism and how it affects particle physics. There is some controversy around the number of parameters determined by the Higgs and the confidence in its existence, as well as the possibility of alternative models. The conversation also touches on political motivations in the shutdown of the LEP accelerator and the perception of high-energy experiments as more "sexy" than low-energy ones.
  • #1
touqra
287
0
I read that fermions really should be massless when you write down the Lagrangian, as it violates the gauge symmetry. It's the Higgs coupled to them that give them their masses. I was so shocked.
I have only learned QED and abit of QCD Lagrangian, and the fermions did have masses in the Lagrangian...
Also, how many parameters in particle physics are determined by this Higgs thing? Why is everyone still so confident in the Higgs? The LEP accelerator has found no evidence of Higgs.
 
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  • #2
It's true in the full theory that fermions are massless. I Think of QED and QCD as useful approximations where the ugly stuff with the Higgs is stored in the "masses" of the fermions.
 
  • #3
touqra said:
Also, how many parameters in particle physics are determined by this Higgs thing? Why is everyone still so confident in the Higgs? The LEP accelerator has found no evidence of Higgs.

firstly, the Higgs mechanism does not predict fermion masses, they are given by the Yukawa couplings of which their values are put it by hand to fit the experimental data. There are higher dimensional theories that attempt to reduce the number of free parameters in the model: eg. 5D split fermion models.

anyway, ppl are still hopeful that the Higgs or some Higgs like object or something new will be found at the LHC later this year or early next year.
 
  • #4
touqra said:
I was so shocked.
Although it is true that the mass of fermions is somewhat put by hand via the Yukawa couplings, the way vector mesons acquire mass through the Higgs mechanism is quite elegant and more subtle.

The LEP accelerator has found no evidence of Higgs.
Truth is far from being that simple. As evidences for a light Higgs was beginning to accumulate, some people claim that it was decided to shut down LEP before the Higgs was discovered, because the motivation for LHC would have been greatly reduced. This is way more shoking, and quite controversial in fact. :smile: But in any case, there are many things to be discovered at LHC.

Why is everyone still so confident in the Higgs?
Not everybody relies blindly on the Higgs mechanism. Alternatives exist. Composite Higgs model for instance. Also, more complicated scenari.

It is very possible that the standard model is a low-energy effective model, in fact most physicists would consider it in this manner I guess. This does not prevent a scalar Higgs-like particle to be discovered at LHC, even though the true mechanism might be much more complicated, or better, much simpler but belonging to another, yet to be found and/or established as correct, formalism :smile:
 
  • #5
humanino said:
Although it is true that the mass of fermions is somewhat put by hand via the Yukawa couplings, the way vector mesons acquire mass through the Higgs mechanism is quite elegant and more subtle.

Could you explain more on this? Why do you single out vector mesons?

humanino said:
Truth is far from being that simple. As evidences for a light Higgs was beginning to accumulate, some people claim that it was decided to shut down LEP before the Higgs was discovered, because the motivation for LHC would have been greatly reduced. This is way more shoking, and quite controversial in fact. :smile: But in any case, there are many things to be discovered at LHC.

Sounds to me like "politics".


humanino said:
It is very possible that the standard model is a low-energy effective model, in fact most physicists would consider it in this manner I guess. This does not prevent a scalar Higgs-like particle to be discovered at LHC, even though the true mechanism might be much more complicated, or better, much simpler but belonging to another, yet to be found and/or established as correct, formalism :smile:

We have never found a scalar particle. Why should we have one like Higgs? Can some other non-scalar particles take the place of a scalar Higgs?
 
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  • #6
touqra said:
Could you explain more on this? Why do you single out vector mesons?
Because the mechanism of spontaneous breaking of electroweak symmetry involves the identification of the right degrees of freedom. The massless Higgs modes or Goldstone's bosons get eaten by the longitudinal component of the vector bosons. This is way less trivial than just postulating a Yukawa coupling for fermions.
Why should we have one like Higgs? Can some other non-scalar particles take the place of a scalar Higgs?
No they could not. I was just saying that the Higgs particle might not be fundamental. However, this is very controversial. Technicolor models have almost certainly been ruled out already. The reason I keep thinking that the Higgs might be just an effective degree of freedom is because it appears almost miraculously within the framework of Connes' noncommutative geometry.
 
  • #7
touqra said:
Sounds to me like "politics".

Maybe. I think a lot of people find the higher-energy experiments to be more "sexy", as a friend of mine put it, than the lower-energy nuclear physics experiments, and so do governments. The bigger the accelerator, the bigger the status symbol it becomes. So this is really no surprise to me at all. If anything, I was more surprised when the SSC was canceled in the mid-1990's than when this allegation came down the pipeline. It is entirely possible that the LEP shutdown in favor of the LHC was politically motivated. And, of course, the higher energy is "sexy"...

Man, I wish nuclear physics and low-energy collider physics was still "sexy"...
 
  • #8
mormonator_rm said:
Man, I wish nuclear physics and low-energy collider physics was still "sexy"...
I think there are many reasons for this state of affair. Possibly, a key ingredient is the fact that those very high energy experiment reach a critical mass where they become visible to the large public. They are for sure more able to communicate to the large public than small collaboration at low or intermediate energies.

One think in particular strikes me with amazement. If you ask a randomly chosen person what the Higgs boson is all about, you might get something sensical, that is the person might know that it is supposed to explain the origin of mass. It appears to me however that this well-known argument has a major flaw : it does not explain the origin of mass. Mass around us is hadronic, and the mass-gap problem (in general Yang-Mills theories) is also very important, possibly more important than the existence (or not) of the Higgs boson. However, people working in the hadronic community, performing direct experiments on quark confinement and/or mass spectra, do not seem to attract one thousandth of the attention the large public gives to Higgs boson researches. If we do not take into account non-commutative geometry, the Higgs boson is a very phenomelogical object to the theoretician and/or mathematician eye. But the mass-gap is a puzzle ranging from pure algebraic geometry all the way to accelerator labs.
 
  • #9
humanino said:
I think there are many reasons for this state of affair. Possibly, a key ingredient is the fact that those very high energy experiment reach a critical mass where they become visible to the large public. They are for sure more able to communicate to the large public than small collaboration at low or intermediate energies.

One think in particular strikes me with amazement. If you ask a randomly chosen person what the Higgs boson is all about, you might get something sensical, that is the person might know that it is supposed to explain the origin of mass. It appears to me however that this well-known argument has a major flaw : it does not explain the origin of mass. Mass around us is hadronic, and the mass-gap problem (in general Yang-Mills theories) is also very important, possibly more important than the existence (or not) of the Higgs boson. However, people working in the hadronic community, performing direct experiments on quark confinement and/or mass spectra, do not seem to attract one thousandth of the attention the large public gives to Higgs boson researches. If we do not take into account non-commutative geometry, the Higgs boson is a very phenomelogical object to the theoretician and/or mathematician eye. But the mass-gap is a puzzle ranging from pure algebraic geometry all the way to accelerator labs.

This is so true! It is as if the low-energy realm has been forgotten by the public almost entirely because it just isn't interesting or exciting to them. Personally, as someone who is involved entirely in low-energy meson spectroscopy, I think this is a shame because a lot of worldwide medical and energy solutions are more closely related to the low-energy realm than to the high-energy realm. The high-energy realm experiments are, in my own opinion, related mostly to curiosity, and are highly speculative.
 
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1. What are fermions?

Fermions are a type of subatomic particle that make up matter. They have half-integer spin and follow the Pauli exclusion principle, meaning that no two fermions can occupy the same quantum state. Examples of fermions include electrons, protons, and neutrons.

2. What does it mean for a fermion to be massless?

A massless fermion is a fermion that has no rest mass, meaning that it travels at the speed of light. According to Einstein's theory of relativity, particles with mass cannot reach the speed of light, so a massless fermion can travel at this maximum speed and has no rest mass.

3. What is the Higgs boson and its role in fermion mass?

The Higgs boson is a subatomic particle that was predicted by the Standard Model of particle physics. It is responsible for giving particles their mass through the Higgs mechanism. This includes fermions, which interact with the Higgs field and acquire mass through this interaction.

4. What is the significance of the LEP results in relation to fermion masslessness?

The Large Electron-Positron Collider (LEP) was an accelerator at CERN that was used to study subatomic particles, including fermions. The results from LEP experiments provided evidence for the existence of the Higgs boson and helped to confirm the role of the Higgs field in giving fermions their mass.

5. How do the results from LEP impact our understanding of the universe?

The results from LEP, along with other experiments, have provided strong support for the Standard Model of particle physics, which is the most widely accepted theory for describing the fundamental particles and forces in the universe. The discovery of the Higgs boson and its role in fermion mass has helped to further our understanding of the fundamental building blocks of the universe and their interactions.

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