A new experiment has broken the known rules of physics, hinting at a mysterious, unknown force that has shaped our universe awoodward@insider.com (Aylin Woodward) © Reidar Hahn/Fermilab The superconducting magnetic storage ring at the Fermilab is 50 feet in diameter. Reidar Hahn/Fermilab
A new study suggests subatomic particles called muons are breaking the laws of physics.
This may mean a mysterious force is affecting muons, which would make our understanding of physics incomplete.
It could be the same force that s responsible for dark matter, which shaped the early universe.
One of the most ubiquitous subatomic particles in the universe, the muon, seems to be misbehaving.
Muon: The tiny sub particle disobeying laws of physics
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Scientists have come closest to confirming a new fundamental force
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First results from Fermilab s Muon g-2 experiment strengthen evidence of new physics -- Science & Technology -- Sott net
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Could muons rewrite the laws of physics?
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