Went to the lecture today:
http://lotus.phys.northwestern.edu/~gshau/Home/NU-HEP_seminar.html
Appears there is a bump in the data around 125 GeV where there is some hope of finding the Higgs boson. Also, while there is no indication that the Higgs is a scalar boson, that is what most believe, so I should probably stop calling a vector boson. Vector vs scalar, meaning that it has only one degree of freedom, as in it doesn't have spin or charge.
http://lotus.phys.northwestern.edu/~gshau/Home/NU-HEP_seminar.html
Appears there is a bump in the data around 125 GeV where there is some hope of finding the Higgs boson. Also, while there is no indication that the Higgs is a scalar boson, that is what most believe, so I should probably stop calling a vector boson. Vector vs scalar, meaning that it has only one degree of freedom, as in it doesn't have spin or charge.