yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Michio Kaku: What Put the Bang in the Big Bang? | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

A few months ago, the headlines were dominated by the fact that physicists think they found the Higgs boson. Well, the media said, this is a great discovery, but what do you mean you think you found the Higgs boson? Well, to within five standard deviations, yes, we think we found the Higgs boson. And the media said, what do you mean by that?

Well, I would have answered the question differently. I would have said, "With 99.9999% confidence, we have bagged the Higgs boson. If you are an odds maker in Las Vegas, and the bets are that you are 99.9999% confident that you have it, then yes, you have it."

So experimental data is not ironclad. You have a bell-shaped curve of information, a bell-shaped curve where the data indicates that you're sitting right here on the top of the bell-shaped curve, but as you go away from the bell-shaped curve, you undergo one standard deviation, two standard deviations, three standard deviations… and here we have five standard deviations of proof.

So in physics, we use that as the gold standard: if you can say you found something within five standard deviations, then it means that, within 99.9999% accuracy, you have actually found it. Most people would say, of course, you have found it.

The Higgs boson is important not just because it gives particles mass. That's how the media played it, and people say, well, so what; ten billion dollars for another god darn subatomic particle that gives us mass; what's the big deal; why call it the God particle; why say that it's one of the great achievements of modern science?

Well, you have to understand something: we physicists squirm when we hear "God particle," but, you see, there is some truth to the name "the God particle" because the Bible says that God set the universe into motion. That's what God did in Genesis, chapter one, verse one.

However, we physicists say that the universe was created in a big bang 13.7 billion years ago. But then the question is, why did it bang? What set off the bang? We don't know. It's a big mystery.

Well, the answer is a Higgs-like boson set off the Big Bang. It put the bang in the Big Bang. See, the purpose of Higgs bosons—and there is more than one—the purpose of the Higgs boson is to break a symmetry.

And when you break symmetries like the symmetry of the universe, then you get big bangs. So what is the Higgs boson? The Higgs boson is a fuse. It's a match. It's the spark that set off the Big Bang. It put the bang in the Big Bang.

More Articles

View All
This is how much YouTube paid me for my 1,000,000 viewed video...
Ah, YouTube! The place where dreams are made and crushed. The place where your monthly income is essentially left up to the gods and whatever the YouTube gods deem you are worthy of for that month. Well, you just have to live with that. But seriously, You…
Mapping the Mysterious Islands Near San Francisco | Best Job Ever
Ross and I went out to the ferons to capture conservation stories and map The Refuge. The Falon National Wildlife Refuge is the largest seabird nesting colony in the lower 48 states, and it’s also an incredibly important breeding ground for marine mammals…
Describing populations | Ecology and natural systems | High school biology | Khan Academy
As you might imagine from the title in this video, we’re going to do a little bit of describing populations. So the first question is: what is a population? You can view it as a group of individuals from the same species living in the same general area. …
Why Time Goes Faster As You Get Older
Close your eyes. Remember yourself as a child, playing with your friends, stressing out about spelling tests at school, coming home to snacks on the table, and asking for help with your homework. What do you feel? Maybe you’re suspended in a time when thi…
Photographing the Real Life of Bees | National Geographic
These have been having a rough time for the last 10-12 years, and so National Geographic asked me, “Can you do a story about honeybees?” This is one of the most well-studied organisms, well-photographed organisms. Like, how am I supposed to drop in out of…
Safari Live - Day 344 | National Geographic
This program features live coverage of an African safari and may include animal kills and carcasses. Viewer discretion is advised. Good afternoon everybody! Welcome once again to the Sunset Safari down in Juma, South Africa, where we sit with a few lions…