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Posted in World Catholic News, on July 5th, 2012

New particle may unlock new discoveries, says Vatican astronomer

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The discovery of a new sub-atomic particle — the so-called Higgs boson — may help scientists discover how the hidden structure of all matter in the universe works, a Vatican astronomer said.

“It indicates that reality is deeper and more rich and strange than our everyday life,” U.S. Jesuit Brother Guy Consolmagno told Catholic News Service.

When people go about their everyday business working or relaxing, they don’t think about the tiniest building blocks of physical matter, but “without these underlying little things, we wouldn’t be here,” he said.

Physicists working with the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research laboratory in Geneva, announced July 4 that they were 99.999 percent certain they found evidence of a new particle that might be key to the structure of the universe and to understanding nature.

British physicist Peter Higgs first hypothesized the existence of the particle in the 1960s as the final missing element in a framework called the Standard Model, which explains how sub-atomic particles and forces interact.

Over the decades, with the help of increasingly powerful and sophisticated high-energy particle accelerators, scientists have been searching for what atoms are made up of, what the smaller components of atoms are made up of, what the nature of those smaller components is, and so on, Brother Consolmagno said.

But it wasn’t clear why some materials, such as protons and electrons, have mass and therefore are attracted to each other by gravity, while other materials, such as photons, have no mass, he said.

“Higgs, 50 years ago, worked out a model called the Standard Model, that would provide reasons for attraction and why there is mass,” the Jesuit said.

Higgs predicted that if a particle that produced the effect of mass existed, it should be “visible” after two atoms were smashed together at high enough speeds.

Experiments at CERN have revealed that “there is something that looks something like the Higgs-boson,” Brother Consolmagno said. The new data “will be used to test the Standard Model and how sub-atomic particles work,” he said.

The Higgs-boson had been nicknamed “the God particle” as “a joke” in an attempt to depict the particle as “almost like a gift from God to help explain how reality works in the sub-atomic world,” he said. Because the particle is believed to be what gives mass to matter, it was assigned the godlike status of being able to create something out of nothing.

But such “God of the gaps” conjectures are not only bad reasons to believe in God, they are also bad science, Brother Consolmagno said.

“You’ll look foolish, in say 2050, when they discover the real reason” for a phenomenon that was explained away earlier by the hand of God, he said.

However, another kind of faith and hope do exist in the scientific community, he said.

“No one would have built this enormous experiment,” tapping the time and talents of thousands of scientists around the world, “without faith they would find something,” he said.

“My belief in God gives me the courage to look at the physical universe and to expect to find order and beauty,” he said. “It’s my faith that inspires me to do science.”



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  • Father John Stokely distributes communion for the first time as a priest.Father John Stokely distributes communion for the first time as a priest.
  • Archbishop Chaput anoints the hands of John Stokely with the oil of chrism, in the rite of ordination of a priest.Archbishop Chaput anoints the hands of John Stokely with the oil of chrism, in the rite of ordination of a priest.
  • A beaming Father Sean Loomis, right, receives a hug from his brother priest after being vested in the stole and chasuble, the outer garment of a priest celebrating Mass.A beaming Father Sean Loomis, right, receives a hug from his brother priest after being vested in the stole and chasuble, the outer garment of a priest celebrating Mass.
  • From left, Transitional Deacons Sean Loomis, John Stokely and Thomas Viviano joyfully process into the cathedral for their ordination as priests.From left, Transitional Deacons Sean Loomis, John Stokely and Thomas Viviano joyfully process into the cathedral for their ordination as priests.
  • Ordination IMG_4410
  • Auxiliary Bishop Timothy C. Senior, rector of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, states publicly that he finds the three men worthy to be ordained priests as he presents the candidates to the Archbishop.Auxiliary Bishop Timothy C. Senior, rector of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, states publicly that he finds the three men worthy to be ordained priests as he presents the candidates to the Archbishop.
  • Ordination IMG_4452
  • The three men being ordained priests prostrate themselves before the cathedral's main altar during the prayers of the Litany of Saints.The three men being ordained priests prostrate themselves before the cathedral's main altar during the prayers of the Litany of Saints.
  • Father Sean Loomis is ordained a priest by the laying on of hands and prayers of Archbishop Chaput.Father Sean Loomis is ordained a priest by the laying on of hands and prayers of Archbishop Chaput.
  • Archbishop Chaput lays his hands on the head of Thomas Viviano and silently prays to invoke the Holy Spirit.Archbishop Chaput lays his hands on the head of Thomas Viviano and silently prays to invoke the Holy Spirit.
  • Thomas Viviano prays deeply during his ordination.Thomas Viviano prays deeply during his ordination.
  • Archbishop Charles Chaput extends his hands in prayer over Thomas Viviano, John Stokely and Sean Loomis as he ordains them to the priesthood.Archbishop Charles Chaput extends his hands in prayer over Thomas Viviano, John Stokely and Sean Loomis as he ordains them to the priesthood.
  • Archbishop Charels Chaput annoints the hands of Sean Loomis with the oil of chrism.Archbishop Charels Chaput annoints the hands of Sean Loomis with the oil of chrism.
  • Archbishop Chaput gives the paten and chalice -- the sacred vessels for consecrating the bread and wine for holy Communion -- to John Stokely during his ordination.Archbishop Chaput gives the paten and chalice -- the sacred vessels for consecrating the bread and wine for holy Communion -- to John Stokely during his ordination.
  • Father Thomas Viviano shares a fraternal kiss with Archbishop Charles Chaput after being ordained.Father Thomas Viviano shares a fraternal kiss with Archbishop Charles Chaput after being ordained.
  • The three newly ordained priests concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Chaput for the first time.The three newly ordained priests concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Chaput for the first time.

Three new priests ordained for Archdiocese

Archbishop Charles Chaput ordained Sean Loomis, John Stokely and Thomas Viviano to the priesthood for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on Saturday, May 18 at the Cathedral Basilica of SS. Peter and Paul.

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