London: Nobel Prize-winning physicist Peter Higgs has died in Edinburgh at the age of 94 after a short illness. Giving this information, Peter Matheson, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh, said that University Professor Emeritus Higgs had suggested the existence of a new particle, the God Particle, in 1964. After that, Higgs' thesis of the divine particle born from extremely intense energy was proved 50 years later in the Large Radon Collider dug in the tunnel in Jura Mount, France.
In 2013 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for his research, along with François Angleterre of Belgium.
In the discovery of sub-atomic particles, Indian-origin scientist Dr. Satyendranath Bose also supported. That is why those subatomic particles were named Higgs boson.
About Peter Higgs, Peter Matheson, Vice Chancellor of Edinburgh University, told journalists that this great scientist, born in 1930, explained in his theory about sub-atomic particles how the world was created. His theory of subatomic particles at the center of the atom became a fundamental theory, as did Niels Bohr's theory of atomic structure.
The most important argument he made from this group of subatomic particles is that they become fundamental. Special research has surprisingly shown that if they approach more than half of the backbone of the SB the positrons attract each other rather than repel them.
It is also said that Higgs had talked about microscopic particles but had also said that the size of the universe is 3.5 billion light years. That means light takes 3.5 billion years to travel from one end of the universe to the other at a speed of 136,000 miles per second.
Don't count. The mind will wander.
The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh also said that by giving the theory of sub-atomic particles, he has made the future generation also curious about scientific research.