[General] New particle discovered from abundance of pairs of gamma rays

John Williamson John.Williamson at glasgow.ac.uk
Thu Dec 17 20:56:53 PST 2015


Hello Michael,

Thanks for picking this up. Indeed, Multiple gammas are important.

It looks as though more particles with the "signature of the Higgs" are beginning to turn up, as I thought they might. Embarrassing, if you think you have have already discovered it, to discover it again and again and again ...

Gammas could also arise, in one of the variants of my theory, from interactions of concentrations of p-vot and n-vot (if such stuff exists). An interesting question - is anyone aware of any anomalous sources of gamma-rays cosmologically?

Regards, John.
________________________________
From: General [general-bounces+john.williamson=glasgow.ac.uk at lists.natureoflightandparticles.org] on behalf of Michael Mercury [michael.b.mercury at gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 16, 2015 1:11 AM
To: general at lists.natureoflightandparticles.org
Subject: [General] New particle discovered from abundance of pairs of gamma rays

Dear All,

What are your thoughts on the new potential discovery at CERN?

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/16/science/physicists-in-europe-find-tantalizing-hints-of-a-mysterious-new-particle.html

I can't help but think "excess of pairs of gamma rays" is somehow relevant to this group's discussion of what makes up particles (generalizing the electron to other particles).

I don't understand it, but hopefully food for thought for one of you.

All the best,

Michael Mercury
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