Interactions - Communicating particle physics in the 21st century
The un-common language of science -
Does particle physics need to find new ways of describing itself?
by John Womersley
I recently attended a conference with a significant number of cosmologists,
dark matter experimentalists and so on-people we don't normally talk to
very much.
I gave a typical talk about the Higgs search at the Tevatron. Afterwards,
during the coffee break, one of the cosmologists came up to me and
started asking questions. It took half an hour of the two of us standing
at a whiteboard, re-interpreting my talk, before we both understood, in
a common language, why what I had just described mattered to him.
This conversation brought home to me one of our problems in particle
physics. Often we like to focus inwards on our experiments, treating them
as closed controlled systems where we can understand all the rules of a
game of particles and forces. As for what this means for the universe, we just
hope that cosmologists will read our papers and figure out the implications.
This compartmentalization is bad for us all. Any discussion with nonspecialists
will make it clear that what we do has relevance only because
it helps us understand the cosmos. Few people care about understanding
proton-antiproton collisions at 2 TeV; many people care about understanding
the universe. Moreover, our own physics experience should teach us that we
cannot separate the forces we observe from the symmetries of the cosmos:
in a real sense, they are the same thing.
We should never talk about finding the Higgs as if it's another particle to add
to our list of trophies. We should talk about it (and think about it) as a weird
property of space-time that we are trying to explore experimentally. The
universe is not an empty space in which the rules of particle physics apply;
the universe is the rules and the rules are the universe.
My discussion at this conference didn't change the physics that I did-
we'll still look for the Higgs in the same way. But it helped to change my
appreciation of why we are doing what we do. I believe it may help to change
the public's appreciation, too. One way to foster
that appreciation is to use a different language.
The term "life sciences" is used to cover biology,
medicine, biochemistry, and genetics, because they
seek to understand, and ultimately manipulate, the
processes of life. Recent advances have blurred
the boundaries between them and created new
sub-disciplines, but life sciences as a whole are
vibrant and active.
By analogy, I believe we should refer to astronomy,
particle physics, cosmology, string theory,
gravitational wave searches and so on as
"cosmic sciences." They all seek to understand
(and, yes, ultimately manipulate) the processes
of the cosmos.
Trying to talk about particle physics without talking
about the cosmos is like talking about DNA without
talking about life-it may be scientifically valid, but
it is devoid of context. Our accelerator-based
particle physics experiments are cosmic science
because the ways in which matter behaves, and
which these experiments reveal, apply everywhere
in the universe.
At the highest level, what we are trying to do is to
understand the recipe we would need if we were
going to create this universe from scratch. By
recipe, I mean what kind of space, time, forces,
symmetries and matter we would need to use and
how to set them up. For millennia, philosophers
have tried to answer this question, but our goal
is to understand things through experiments, not
through philosophizing.
Cosmologists are often criticized because
they cannot conduct experiments to test their
hypothesis. That's not true. What we do in
the Tevatron is experimental cosmology-
the experimental exploration of the structure
of the cosmos.
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last modified 5/10/2002 email Fermilab |
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