A New Map of All the Particles and Forces (2024)

[Editor’s note: The full, interactive map is available below.]

All of nature springs from a handful of components — the fundamental particles — that interact with one another in only a few different ways. In the 1970s, physicists developed a set of equations describing these particles and interactions. Together, the equations formed a succinct theory now known as the Standard Model of particle physics.

The Standard Model is missing a few puzzle pieces (conspicuously absent are the putative particles that make up dark matter, those that convey the force of gravity, and an explanation for the mass of neutrinos), but it provides an extremely accurate picture of almost all other observed phenomena.

Yet for a framework that encapsulates our best understanding of nature’s fundamental order, the Standard Model still lacks a coherent visualization. Most attempts are too simple, or they ignore important interconnections or are jumbled and overwhelming.

Consider the most common visualization, which shows a periodic table of particles:

This approach doesn’t offer insight into the relationships between the particles. The force-carrying particles (namely the photon, which conveys the electromagnetic force; the W and Z bosons, which convey the weak force; and the gluons, which convey the strong force) are put on the same footing as the matter particles those forces act between — quarks, electrons and their kin. Furthermore, key properties like “color” are left out.

Another representation was developed for the 2013 filmParticle Fever:

While this visualization properly emphasizes the centrality of the Higgs boson — the linchpin of the Standard Model, for reasons explained below — the Higgs is placed next to the photon and gluon, even though in reality the Higgs doesn’t affect those particles. And the quadrants of the circle are misleading — implying, for instance, that the photon only couples to the particles it touches, which isn’t the case.

A New Approach

Chris Quigg, a particle physicist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Illinois, has been thinking about how to visualize the Standard Model for decades, hoping that a more powerful visual representation would help familiarize people with the known particles of nature and prompt them to think about how these particles might fit into a larger, more complete theoretical framework. Quigg’s visual representation shows more of the Standard Model’s underlying order and structure. He calls his scheme the “double simplex” representation, because the left-handed and right-handed particles of nature each form a simplex — a generalization of a triangle. We have adopted Quigg’s scheme and made further modifications.

Let’s build up the double simplex from scratch.

Quarks at the Bottom

Matter particles come in two main varieties, leptons and quarks. (Note that, for every kind of matter particle in nature, there is also an antimatter particle, which has the same mass but is opposite in every other way. As other Standard Model visualizations have done, we elide antimatter, which would form a separate, inverted double simplex.)

Let’s start with quarks, and in particular the two types of quarks that make up the protons and neutrons inside atomic nuclei. These are the up quark, which possesses two-thirds of a unit of electric charge, and the down quark, with an electric charge of −1/3.

Up and down quarks can be either “left-handed” or “right-handed” depending on whether they are spinning clockwise or counterclockwise with respect to their direction of motion.

Weak Change

Left-handed up and down quarks can transform into each other, via an interaction called the weak force. This happens when the quarks exchange a particle called a W boson — one of the carriers of the weak force, with an electric charge of either +1 or −1. These weak interactions are represented by the orange line:

Strangely, there are no right-handed W bosons in nature. This means right-handed up and down quarks cannot emit or absorb W bosons, so they don’t transform into each other.

Strong Colors

Quarks also possess a kind of charge called color. A quark can have either red, green or blue color charge. A quark’s color makes it sensitive to the strong force.

The strong force binds quarks of different colors together into composite particles such as protons and neutrons, which are “colorless,” with no net color charge.

Quarks transform from one color to another by absorbing or emitting particles called gluons, the carriers of the strong force. These interactions form the sides of a triangle. Because gluons possess color charge themselves, they constantly interact with one another as well as with quarks. The interactions between gluons fill the triangle in.

A New Map of All the Particles and Forces (2024)

FAQs

What are the 17 particles? ›

There are 17 known elementary particles — 6 leptons, 6 quarks, but only 5 bosons. There's one force carrier missing — the graviton. The Standard Model predicts that gravity should have a force-carrying boson, in the guise of the graviton. Gravitational waves are, in theory, formed from gravitons.

What are the 12 particles of matter? ›

The 12 fundamental particles of physics include: up quarks, down quarks, strange quarks, charm quarks, top quarks, bottom quarks, electrons, electron neutrinos, muons, muon neutrinos, tau, and tau neutrinos. The particles make up matter and mass.

What are the 36 subatomic particles? ›

History
ParticleCompositionComments
neutrino νelementary (lepton)Solved the problem of energy spectrum of beta decay.
quarks ( u , d , s )elementaryNo particular confirmation event for the quark model.
charm quark celementary (quark)
bottom quark belementary (quark)
18 more rows

What are the four types of particles? ›

Elementary particles are quarks, leptons and bosons. These particles then join together to create the more well-known particles, such as the neutron and the proton. Such particles are known as composite particles, as they are composed of two or more of these elementary particles.

How many God particles are there? ›

Theories that go beyond the standard model of particle physics also predict as many as five different types of Higgs bosons which may be produced more infrequently than the primary Higgs boson.

What are the 4 new particles? ›

The four new particles we've discovered recently are all tetraquarks with a charm quark pair and two other quarks. All these objects are particles in the same way as the proton and the neutron are particles. But they are not fundamental particles: quarks and electrons are the true building blocks of matter.

Are there 22 types of matter? ›

Considering all the studies that have been done till today, there are 22 states of matter in total described below: Solid: a solid holds a definite shape and volume without a container and its particles are held very close to each other.

What are the 27 states of matter? ›

Classical states
  • Solid: A solid holds a definite shape and volume without the need of a container. ...
  • Liquid: A mostly non-compressible fluid. ...
  • Gas: A compressible fluid. ...
  • Mesomorphic states: States of matter intermediate between solid and liquid.

Are there 7 types of matter? ›

Yes, there are seven states of matter. Most people are familiar with the most common states of matter found on Earth. These are solid, liquid, and gas. Additional states of matter include plasma, Bose-Einstein condensate, quark-gluon plasma, and degenerate matter.

What's smaller than a quark? ›

In particle physics, preons are hypothetical point particles, conceived of as sub-components of quarks and leptons.

What comes after quarks? ›

Gluons. Gluons mediate the strong interaction, which join quarks and thereby form hadrons, which are either baryons (three quarks) or mesons (one quark and one antiquark). Protons and neutrons are baryons, joined by gluons to form the atomic nucleus.

Is there anything smaller than a photon? ›

A photon is a unit of light that cannot be broken into smaller pieces. This particle is the tiniest possible packet of electromagnetic radiation.

What is charm in physics? ›

Charm (symbol C) is a flavour quantum number representing the difference between the number of charm quarks ( ) and charm antiquarks ( ) that are present in a particle: By convention, the sign of flavour quantum numbers agree with the sign of the electric charge carried by the quarks of corresponding flavour.

What is the quark theory? ›

Quarks are proposed to be the simplest, irreducible, structureless building blocks of hadrons. The Quark Hypothesis states that quarks in combinations of two or three, make all the observed hadrons. In 1963, the three quarks were named: up (u), down (d), and strange (s).

What is the higgs field in simple terms? ›

The Higgs boson is the fundamental particle associated with the Higgs field, a field that gives mass to other fundamental particles such as electrons and quarks. A particle's mass determines how much it resists changing its speed or position when it encounters a force. Not all fundamental particles have mass.

What are the 3 particles that CERN found? ›

According to the CERN release, most exotic hadrons discovered in the past two decades are tetraquarks or pentaquarks containing a charm quark and a charm antiquark — with the remaining two or three quarks being an up, down or strange quark or their antiquarks.

Which particles has 18 electrons 18 neutrons and 17 protons in it? ›

Hence, the correct answer is chloride ion . Q. Name the particle which has 18 electrons, 18 neutrons and 17 protons in it.

What subatomic particles are in oxygen 17? ›

Oxygen-17 has 8 protons, 8 electrons, and 9 neutrons.

What are the god particles in the universe? ›

In the media, the Higgs boson has often been called the "God particle" after the 1993 book The God Particle by Nobel Laureate Leon Lederman. The name has been criticised by physicists, including Higgs.

References

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