Year of physics
Nature 433, 239-247 (20 January 2005) | doi:10.1038/nature03281; Published online 19 January 2005
In search of symmetry lost
Frank Wilczek1
Abstract
Powerful symmetry principles have guided physicists in their quest for nature's fundamental laws. The successful gauge theory of electroweak interactions postulates a more extensive symmetry for its equations than are manifest in the world. The discrepancy is ascribed to a pervasive symmetry-breaking field, which fills all space uniformly, rendering the Universe a sort of exotic superconductor. So far, the evidence for these bold ideas is indirect. But soon the theory will undergo a critical test depending on whether the quanta of this symmetry-breaking field, the so-called Higgs particles, are produced at the Large Hadron Collider (due to begin operation in 2007).
- The Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA (e-mail: Email: wilczek@mit.edu)
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