The Higgs particle could break physics throughout the universe. Here's why it hasn't.

The elusive Higgs particle has the power to undo physics as we know it. The fact that it hasn't could have big implications about the nature of the universe.

A photo of a nebula with swirling cream and orange clouds, and blue-tinted stars in the middle
Tarantula nebula — a starforming region — seen by the James Webb Space Telescope.
(Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Webb ERO Production Team)

Although our universe may seem stable, having existed for a whopping 13.7 billion years, several experiments suggest that it is at risk — walking on the edge of a very dangerous cliff. And it's all down to the instability of a single fundamental particle: the Higgs boson.

In new research by me and my colleagues, just accepted for publication in Physical Letters B, we show that some models of the early universe, those which involve objects called light primordial black holes, are unlikely to be right because they would have triggered the Higgs boson to end the cosmos by now.

Lucien Heurtier
Postdoctoral Research Associate, King's College London

I currently work at King's College London as a postdoctoral research associate, in the group of Theoretical Particle Physics and Cosmology. Expert in astroparticle physics and theories of the early Universe, I have been working as a researcher for 9 years, searching for the nature of dark matter and exploring original models that could describe the evolution of the primordial universe.