Tom Kibble, a leading British physicist whose work helped lead to the discovery of the Higgs boson, died Thursday aged 83, his university in London said.

In 1964, Kibble worked on one of the three earliest research papers theorising the existence of the Higgs Boson, a believed to explain how matter acquires mass.

In 2012, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN) announced it had discovered a particle commensurate with the boson.

This led to Peter Higgs and Francois Englert, who had worked on the two other papers in 1964, being jointly awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2013.

Kibble told the Guardian that year that it had felt "quite surreal" to watch a webcast of the results from the CERN experiments.

"To find that something we'd done that long ago was again the focus of attention is certainly not a normal experience, even in physics," Kibble said. "It was rather peculiar."

In a statement, Professor Jerome Gauntlett, head of at Imperial College London, said Kibble had been a man of "extraordinary modesty and humility".

"Professor Sir Tom Kibble was distinguished for his ground-breaking research in theoretical physics and his work has contributed to our deepest understanding of the fundamental forces of nature," Gauntlett said.

"He was held in the highest esteem by his colleagues and students alike. He will be very sadly missed".

Imperial College did not give details of the cause of death.