Note to users. If you're seeing this message, it means that your browser cannot find this page's style/presentation instructions -- or possibly that you are using a browser that does not support current Web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing, and what you can do to make your experience of our site the best it can be.


Science 1 September 1995:
Vol. 269. no. 5228, pp. 1218 - 1219
DOI: 10.1126/science.269.5228.1218

Articles

Physicists Polish One Model While Looking to the Next

Alexander Hellemans 1

1 Writer in Amsterdam

BRUSSELS, BELGIUM—High-energy physicists' current explanation for the behavior of subatomic particles and forces, known as the Standard Model, is doing just fine. That was the take-home message for the 800 delegates who gathered here from 27 July to 2 August for the International Europhysics Conference on High-Energy Physics. "Mainly this was a conference of consolidation, steady progress, many very beautiful and detailed results," Christopher Llewellyn Smith, director general of CERN, the European particle physics laboratory, told Science. But while a multitude of presentations described ever more accurate tests and confirmations of the model, physicists also discussed hints that a whole new range of phenomena beyond the Standard Model is lurking just above the energies of current accelerators—and within range of the next generation of experiments.





To Advertise     Find Products


Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)