Lily Asquith, a researcher from the department of physics and astronomy at the University of London, has spent the last two years in France following the trail of the Higgs boson with the ATLAS detector. Seated at the “God machine,” a gigantic, 27-kilometers-long particle accelerator installed at CERN where one hundred physicists from around the world seek to explain the origin of matter, Asquith focused her attention on a particular boson with both quark and anti-quark properties called tth(H-> bb), also known as SUSY (an abbreviation for supersymmetric particle).
Jordi Montaner | 31 may 2010