Stephen hawking god particle, I was immersed in learning that Lady Gaga doesn't care that Madonna doesn't like her when I had this thought: "Physics doesn't seem that interesting anymore."
No sooner had this vexing notion entered (and exited) my head than I learned I was not alone. For famed physicist Stephen Hawking feels the same way.
Speaking at London's Science Museum, Hawking lamented the discovery of the so-called God particle.
It seems that once you've located the Higgs boson, the particle responsible for mass in the standard model of physics, well, what are you going to do?
Hawking's words, as quoted by The Guardian, were: "Physics would have been far more interesting if it had not been found."
Perhaps it's a little like watching Mark Zuckerberg create Facebook and entice everyone onto it. What to do now? Google+?
Hawking, though, claimed not to be entirely pessimistic -- and I suspect he was joking more than a little. After all, he did lose a $100 bet over the God particle discovery.
His next hope is that the Large Hadron Collider work will move toward finding some unifying theory for the whole of the universe. He mentioned M-theory, which attempts to find a uniting principle between gravity and quantum mechanics.
He wasn't cheerful for too long, though. He also warned that we don't have all that much time left on Earth.
"I don't think we will survive another thousand years without escaping beyond our fragile planet. I therefore want to encourage public interest in space," he said.
No sooner had this vexing notion entered (and exited) my head than I learned I was not alone. For famed physicist Stephen Hawking feels the same way.
Speaking at London's Science Museum, Hawking lamented the discovery of the so-called God particle.
It seems that once you've located the Higgs boson, the particle responsible for mass in the standard model of physics, well, what are you going to do?
Hawking's words, as quoted by The Guardian, were: "Physics would have been far more interesting if it had not been found."
Perhaps it's a little like watching Mark Zuckerberg create Facebook and entice everyone onto it. What to do now? Google+?
Hawking, though, claimed not to be entirely pessimistic -- and I suspect he was joking more than a little. After all, he did lose a $100 bet over the God particle discovery.
His next hope is that the Large Hadron Collider work will move toward finding some unifying theory for the whole of the universe. He mentioned M-theory, which attempts to find a uniting principle between gravity and quantum mechanics.
He wasn't cheerful for too long, though. He also warned that we don't have all that much time left on Earth.
"I don't think we will survive another thousand years without escaping beyond our fragile planet. I therefore want to encourage public interest in space," he said.