Higgs Boson -- on Your Own
T. Csorgo (Wigner RCP, Budapest, Hungary)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a card game designed to help teachers, students, and laypersons understand the properties and discovery of the Higgs boson through an interactive, accessible, and educational tool.
Contribution
It presents a novel, hands-on card game that simulates Higgs boson properties and decays, making complex particle physics concepts more approachable for educational purposes.
Findings
The game effectively illustrates Higgs decay channels.
It promotes understanding of particle physics through play.
The game is suitable for various educational levels.
Abstract
One of the highlights of 2012 in physics is related to two papers, published by the ATLAS and the CMS Collaborations, that announced the discovery of at least one new particle in pp collisions at CERN LHC. At least one of the properties of this new particle is found to be similar to that of the Higgs boson, the last and most difficult to find building block from the Standard Model of particle physics. Physics teachers are frequently approached by their media-educated students, who inquire about the properties of the Higgs boson, but physics teachers are rarely trained to teach this elusive aspect of particle physics in elementary, middle or junior high schools. In this paper I describe a card-game, that can be considered as a hands-on and easily accessible tool that allows interested teachers, students and also motivated lay-persons to play with the properties of the newly found…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Particle Detector Development and Performance · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
