Main content

The mysterious particles of physics, part 1

The machine that discovered the Higgs Boson 10 years ago is about to restart after a massive upgrade, to dig deeper into the heart of matter and the nature of the Universe.

The machine that discovered the Higgs Boson 10 years ago is about to restart after a massive upgrade, to dig deeper into the heart of matter and the nature of the Universe.

Roland Pease returns to CERN’s 27-kilometre Large Hadron Collider (LHC) dug deeper under the Swiss-French border to meet the scientists wondering why the Universe is the way it is. He hears why the Nobel-prize winning discovery of the β€œHiggs Particle” remains a cornerstone of the current understanding of the nature of matter; why the search for β€œdark matter” – 25% of the cosmos - is proving to be so hard; and CERN’s plans for an atom smasher 4 times as big to be running by the middle of the century.

Image: CMS Beampipe removal LS2 2019 (Credit: Maximilien Brice/CERN)

Available now

30 minutes

Last on

Mon 11 Jul 2022 00:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Mon 4 Jul 2022 19:32GMT
  • Tue 5 Jul 2022 03:32GMT
  • Tue 5 Jul 2022 04:32GMT
  • Tue 5 Jul 2022 08:32GMT
  • Tue 5 Jul 2022 12:32GMT
  • Tue 5 Jul 2022 19:32GMT
  • Mon 11 Jul 2022 00:32GMT

Space

The eclipses, spacecraft and astronauts changing our view of the Universe

The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry

The Curious Cases of Rutherford and Fry

A pair of scientific sleuths answer your perplexing questions. Ask them anything!

Podcast