CHAPTER
5
ELEMENTARY
PARTICLES AND THE FORCES OF NATURE
Aristotle
believed that all the matter in the universe was made up of four
basic elements earth, air, fire, and water. These elements
were acted on by two forces: gravity, the tendency for earth and
water to sink, and levity, the tendency for air and fire to rise.
This division of the contents of the universe into matter and
forces is still used today. Aristotle believed that matter was
continuous, that is, one could divide a piece of matter into smaller
and smaller bits without any limit: one never came up against
a grain of matter that could not be divided further. A few Greeks,
however, such as Democritus, held that matter was inherently grainy
and that everything was made up of large numbers of various different
kinds of atoms. (The word atom means indivisible
in Greek.) For centuries the argument continued without any real
evidence on either side, but in 1803 the British chemist and physicist
John Dalton pointed out that the fact that chemical compounds
always combined in certain proportions could be explained by the
grouping together of atoms to form units called molecules. However,
the argument between the two schools of thought was not finally
settled in favor of the atomists until the early years of this
century. One of the important pieces of physical evidence was
provided by Einstein. In a paper written in 1905, a few weeks
before the famous paper on special relativity, Einstein pointed
out that what was called Brownian motion the irregular,
random motion of small particles of dust suspended in a liquid
could be explained as the effect of atoms of the liquid
colliding with the dust particles.
By
this time there were already suspicions that these atoms were not,
after all, indivisible. Several years previously a fellow of Trinity
College, Cambridge, J. J. Thomson, had demonstrated the existence
of a particle of matter, called the electron, that had a mass less
than one thousandth of that of the lightest atom. He used a setup
rather like a modern TV picture tube: a red-hot metal filament gave
off the electrons, and because these have a negative electric charge,
an electric field could be used to accelerate them toward a phosphor-coated
screen. When they hit the screen, flashes of light were generated.
Soon it was realized that these electrons must be coming from within
the atoms themselves, and in 1911 the New Zealand physicist Ernest
Rutherford finally showed that the atoms of matter do have internal
structure: they are made up of an extremely tiny, positively charged
nucleus, around which a number of electrons orbit. He deduced this
by analyzing the way in which alpha-particles, which are positively
charged particles given off by radioactive atoms, are deflected
when they collide with atoms.
At
first it was thought that the nucleus of the atom was made up of
electrons and different numbers of a positively charged particle
called the proton, from the Greek word meaning first,
because it was believed to be the fundamental unit from which matter
was made. However, in 1932 a colleague of Rutherfords at Cambridge,
James Chadwick, discovered that the nucleus contained another particle,
called the neutron, which had almost the same mass as a proton but
no electrical charge. Chadwick received the Nobel Prize for his
discovery, and was elected Master of Gonville and Caius College,
Cambridge (the college of which I am now a fellow). He later resigned
as Master because of disagreements with the Fellows. There had been
a bitter dispute in the college ever since a group of young Fellows
returning after the war had voted many of the old Fellows out of
the college offices they had held for a long time. This was before
my time; I joined the college in 1965 at the tail end of the bitterness,
when similar disagreements forced another Nobel Prize winning
Master, Sir Nevill Mott, to resign.
Up
to about thirty years ago, it was thought that protons and neutrons
were elementary particles, but experiments in which
protons were collided with other protons or electrons at high speeds
indicated that they were in fact made up of smaller particles. These
particles were named quarks by the Caltech physicist Murray Gell-Mann,
who won the Nobel Prize in 1969 for his work on them. The origin
of the name is an enigmatic quotation from James Joyce: Three
quarks for Muster Mark! The word quark is supposed
to be pronounced like quart, but with a k at the end
instead of a t, but is usually pronounced to rhyme with lark.
There
are a number of different varieties of quarks: there are six flavors,
which we call up, down, strange, charmed, bottom, and top. The first
three flavors had been known since the 1960s but the charmed quark
was discovered only in 1974, the bottom in 1977, and the top in
1995. Each flavor comes in three colors, red, green,
and blue. (It should be emphasized that these terms are just labels:
quarks are much smaller than the wavelength of visible light and
so do not have any color in the normal sense. It is just that modern
physicists seem to have more imaginative ways of naming new particles
and phenomena they no longer restrict themselves to Greek!)
A proton or neutron is made up of three quarks, one of each color.
A proton contains two up quarks and one down quark; a neutron contains
two down and one up. We can create particles made up of the other
quarks (strange, charmed, bottom, and top), but these all have a
much greater mass and decay very rapidly into protons and neutrons.
We
now know that neither the atoms nor the protons and neutrons within
them are indivisible. So the question is: what are the truly elementary
particles, the basic building blocks from which everything is made?
Since the wavelength of light is much larger than the size of an
atom, we cannot hope to look at the parts of an atom
in the ordinary way. We need to use something with a much smaller
wave-length. As we saw in the last chapter, quantum mechanics tells
us that all particles are in fact waves, and that the higher the
energy of a particle, the smaller the wavelength of the corresponding
wave. So the best answer we can give to our question depends on
how high a particle energy we have at our disposal, because this
determines on how small a length scale we can look. These particle
energies are usually measured in units called electron volts. (In
Thomsons experiments with electrons, we saw that he used an
electric field to accelerate the electrons. The energy that an electron
gains from an electric field of one volt is what is known as an
electron volt.) In the nineteenth century, when the only particle
energies that people knew how to use were the low energies of a
few electron volts generated by chemical reactions such as burning,
it was thought that atoms were the smallest unit. In Rutherfords
experiment, the alpha-particles had energies of millions of electron
volts. More recently, we have learned how to use electromagnetic
fields to give particles energies of at first millions and then
thousands of millions of electron volts. And so we know that particles
that were thought to be elementary thirty years ago
are, in fact, made up of smaller particles. May these, as we go
to still higher energies, in turn be found to be made from still
smaller particles? This is certainly possible, but we do have some
theoretical reasons for believing that we have, or are very near
to, a knowledge of the ultimate building blocks of nature.
Using
the wave/particle duality discussed in the last chapter, every-thing
in the universe, including light and gravity, can be described in
terms of particles. These particles have a property called spin.
One way of thinking of spin is to imagine the particles as little
tops spinning about an axis. However, this can be misleading, because
quantum mechanics tells us that the particles do not have any well-defined
axis. What the spin of a particle really tells us is what the particle
looks like from different directions. A particle of spin 0 is like
a dot: it looks the same from every direction Figure 5:1-i.
On the other hand, a particle of spin 1 is like an arrow: it looks
different from different directions Figure 5:1-ii.
Only if one turns it round a complete revolution (360 degrees) does
the particle look the same. A particle of spin 2 is like a double-headed
arrow Figure 5:1-iii:
it looks the same if one turns it round half a revolution (180 degrees).
Similarly, higher spin particles look the same if one turns them
through smaller fractions of a complete revolution. All this seems
fairly straightforward, but the remark-able fact is that there are
particles that do not look the same if one turns them through just
one revolution: you have to turn them through two complete revolutions!
Such particles are said to have spin ½.
All
the known particles in the universe can be divided into two groups:
particles of spin ½, which make up the matter in the universe, and
particles of spin 0, 1, and 2, which, as we shall see, give rise
to forces between the matter particles. The matter particles obey
what is called Paulis exclusion principle. This was discovered
in 1925 by an Austrian physicist, Wolfgang Pauli for which
he received the Nobel Prize in 1945. He was the archetypal theoretical
physicist: it was said of him that even his presence in the same
town would make experiments go wrong! Paulis exclusion principle
says that two similar particles can-not exist in the same state;
that is, they cannot have both the same position and the same velocity,
within the limits given by the uncertainty principle. The exclusion
principle is crucial because it explains why matter particles do
not collapse to a state of very high density under the influence
of the forces produced by the particles of spin 0, 1, and 2: if
the matter particles have very nearly the same positions, they must
have different velocities, which means that they will not stay in
the same position for long. If the world had been created without
the exclusion principle, quarks would not form separate, well-defined
protons and neutrons. Nor would these, together with electrons,
form separate, well-defined atoms. They would all collapse to form
a roughly uniform, dense soup.
A
proper understanding of the electron and other spin-½ particles
did not come until 1928, when a theory was proposed by Paul Dirac,
who later was elected to the Lucasian Professorship of Mathematics
at Cambridge (the same professorship that Newton had once held and
that I now hold). Diracs theory was the first of its kind
that was consistent with both quantum mechanics and the special
theory of relativity. It explained mathematically why the electron
had spin-½; that is, why it didnt look the same if you turned
it through only one complete revolution, but did if you turned it
through two revolutions. It also predicted that the electron should
have a partner: an anti-electron, or positron. The discovery of
the positron in 1932 confirmed Diracs theory and led to his
being awarded the Nobel Prize for physics in 1933. We now know that
every particle has an antiparticle, with which it can annihilate.
(In the case of the force-carrying particles, the antiparticles
are the same as the particles themselves.) There could be whole
antiworlds and antipeople made out of antiparticles. However, if
you meet your antiself, dont shake hands! You would both vanish
in a great flash of light. The question of why there seem to be
so many more particles than antiparticles around us is extremely
important, and I shall return to it later in the chapter.
In
quantum mechanics, the forces or interactions between matter particles
are all supposed to be carried by particles of integer spin
0, 1, or 2. What happens is that a matter particle, such as an electron
or a quark, emits a force-carrying particle. The recoil from this
emission changes the velocity of the matter particle. The force-carrying
particle then collides with another matter particle and is absorbed.
This collision changes the velocity of the second particle, just
as if there had been a force between the two matter particles. It
is an important property of ' the force-carrying particles that
they do not obey the exclusion principle. This means that there
is no limit to the number that can be exchanged, and so they can
give rise to a strong force. However, if the force-carrying particles
have a high mass, it will be difficult to produce and exchange them
over a large distance. So the forces that they carry will have only
a short range. On the other hand, if the force-carrying particles
have no mass of their own, the forces will be long range. The force-carrying
particles exchanged between matter particles are said to be virtual
particles because, unlike real particles, they cannot
be directly detected by a particle detector. We know they exist,
however, because they do have a measurable effect: they give rise
to forces between matter particles. Particles of spin 0, 1, or 2
do also exist in some circumstances as real particles, when they
can be directly detected. They then appear to us as what a classical
physicist would call waves, such as waves of light or gravitational
waves. They may sometimes be emitted when matter particles interact
with each other by exchanging virtual force-carrying particles.
(For example, the electric repulsive force between two electrons
is due to the exchange of virtual photons, which can never be directly
detected; but if one electron moves past another, real photons may
be given off, which we detect as light waves.)
Force-carrying
particles can be grouped into four categories according to the strength
of the force that they carry and the particles with which they interact.
It should be emphasized that this division into four classes is
man-made; it is convenient for the construction of partial theories,
but it may not correspond to anything deeper. Ultimately, most physicists
hope to find a unified theory that will explain all four forces
as different aspects of a single force. Indeed, many would say this
is the prime goal of physics today. Recently, successful attempts
have been made to unify three of the four categories of force
and I shall describe these in this chapter. The question of the
unification of the remaining category, gravity, we shall leave till
later.
The
first category is the gravitational force. This force is universal,
that is, every particle feels the force of gravity, according to
its mass or energy. Gravity is the weakest of the four forces by
a long way; it is so weak that we would not notice it at all were
it not for two special properties that it has: it can act over large
distances, and it is always attractive. This means that the very
weak gravitational forces between the individual particles in two
large bodies, such as the earth and the sun, can all add up to produce
a significant force. The other three forces are either short range,
or are sometimes attractive and some-times repulsive, so they tend
to cancel out. In the quantum mechanical way of looking at the gravitational
field, the force between two matter particles is pictured as being
carried by a particle of spin 2 called the graviton. This has no
mass of its own, so the force that it carries is long range. The
gravitational force between the sun and the earth is ascribed to
the exchange of gravitons between the particles that make up these
two bodies. Although the exchanged particles are virtual, they certainly
do produce a measurable effect they make the earth orbit
the sun! Real gravitons make up what classical physicists would
call gravitational waves, which are very weak and so difficult
to detect that they have not yet been observed.
The
next category is the electromagnetic force, which interacts with
electrically charged particles like electrons and quarks, but not
with uncharged particles such as gravitons. It is much stronger
than the gravitational force: the electromagnetic force between
two electrons is about a million million million million million
million million (1 with forty-two zeros after it) times bigger than
the gravitational force. However, there are two kinds of electric
charge, positive and negative. The force between two positive charges
is repulsive, as is the force between two negative charges, but
the force is attractive between a positive and a negative charge.
A large body, such as the earth or the sun, contains nearly equal
numbers of positive and negative charges. Thus the attractive and
repulsive forces between the individual particles nearly cancel
each other out, and there is very little net electromagnetic force.
However, on the small scales of atoms and molecules, electromagnetic
forces dominate. The electromagnetic attraction between negatively
charged electrons and positively charged protons in the nucleus
causes the electrons to orbit the nucleus of the atom, just as gravitational
attraction causes the earth to orbit the sun. The electromagnetic
attraction is pictured as being caused by the exchange of large
numbers of virtual massless particles of spin 1, called photons.
Again, the photons that are exchanged are virtual particles. However,
when an electron changes from one allowed orbit to another one nearer
to the nucleus, energy is released and a real photon is emitted
which can be observed as visible light by the human eye,
if it has the right wave-length, or by a photon detector such as
photographic film. Equally, if a real photon collides with an atom,
it may move an electron from an orbit nearer the nucleus to one
farther away. This uses up the energy of the photon, so it is absorbed.
The
third category is called the weak nuclear force, which is responsible
for radioactivity and which acts on all matter particles of spin-½,
but not on particles of spin 0, 1, or 2, such as photons and gravitons.
The weak nuclear force was not well understood until 1967, when
Abdus Salam at Imperial College, London, and Steven Weinberg at
Harvard both proposed theories that unified this interaction with
the electromagnetic force, just as Maxwell had unified electricity
and magnetism about a hundred years earlier. They suggested that
in addition to the photon, there were three other spin-1 particles,
known collectively as massive vector bosons, that carried the weak
force. These were called W+ (pronounced W plus), W-
(pronounced W minus), and Zº (pronounced Z naught), and each had
a mass of around 100 GeV (GeV stands for gigaelectron-volt, or one
thousand million electron volts). The Weinberg-Salam theory exhibits
a property known as spontaneous symmetry breaking. This means that
what appear to be a number of completely different particles at
low energies are in fact found to be all the same type of particle,
only in different states. At high energies all these particles behave
similarly. The effect is rather like the behavior of a roulette
ball on a roulette wheel. At high energies (when the wheel is spun
quickly) the ball behaves in essentially only one way it
rolls round and round. But as the wheel slows, the energy of the
ball decreases, and eventually the ball drops into one of the thirty-seven
slots in the wheel. In other words, at low energies there are thirty-seven
different states in which the ball can exist. If, for some reason,
we could only observe the ball at low energies, we would then think
that there were thirty-seven different types of ball!
In
the Weinberg-Salam theory, at energies much greater than 100 GeV,
the three new particles and the photon would all behave in a similar
manner. But at the lower particle energies that occur in most normal
situations, this symmetry between the particles would be broken.
WE, W, and Zº would acquire large masses, making the forces they
carry have a very short range. At the time that Salam and Weinberg
proposed their theory, few people believed them, and particle accelerators
were not powerful enough to reach the energies of 100 GeV required
to produce real W+, W-, or Zº particles. However,
over the next ten years or so, the other predictions of the theory
at lower energies agreed so well with experiment that, in 1979,
Salam and Weinberg were awarded the Nobel Prize for physics, together
with Sheldon Glashow, also at Harvard, who had suggested similar
unified theories of the electromagnetic and weak nuclear forces.
The Nobel committee was spared the embarrassment of having made
a mistake by the discovery in 1983 at CERN (European Centre for
Nuclear Research) of the three massive partners of the photon, with
the correct predicted masses and other properties. Carlo Rubbia,
who led the team of several hundred physicists that made the discovery,
received the Nobel Prize in 1984, along with Simon van der Meer,
the CERNengineer who developed the antimatter storage system employed.
(It is very difficult to make a mark in experimental physics these
days unless you are already at the top! )
The
fourth category is the strong nuclear force, which holds the quarks
together in the proton and neutron, and holds the protons and neutrons
together in the nucleus of an atom. It is believed that this force
is carried by another spin-1 particle, called the gluon, which interacts
only with itself and with the quarks. The strong nuclear force has
a curious property called confinement: it always binds particles
together into combinations that have no color. One cannot have a
single quark on its own because it would have a color (red, green,
or blue). Instead, a red quark has to be joined to a green and a
blue quark by a string of gluons (red + green + blue
= white). Such a triplet constitutes a proton or a neutron. Another
possibility is a pair consisting of a quark and an antiquark (red
+ antired, or green + antigreen, or blue + antiblue = white). Such
combinations make up the particles known as mesons, which are unstable
because the quark and antiquark can annihilate each other, producing
electrons and other particles. Similarly, confinement prevents one
having a single gluon on its own, because gluons also have color.
Instead, one has to have a collection of gluons whose colors add
up to white. Such a collection forms an unstable particle called
a glueball.
The
fact that confinement prevents one from observing an isolated quark
or gluon might seem to make the whole notion of quarks and gluons
as particles somewhat metaphysical. However, there is another property
of the strong nuclear force, called asymptotic freedom, that makes
the concept of quarks and gluons well defined. At normal energies,
the strong nuclear force is indeed strong, and it binds the quarks
tightly together. However, experiments with large particle accelerators
indicate that at high energies the strong force becomes much weaker,
and the quarks and gluons behave almost like free particles.
Figure
5:2 shows a photograph
of a collision between a high-energy proton and antiproton. The
success of the unification of the electromagnetic and weak nuclear
forces led to a number of attempts to combine these two forces with
the strong nuclear force into what is called a grand unified theory
(or GUT). This title is rather an exaggeration: the resultant theories
are not all that grand, nor are they fully unified, as they do not
include gravity. Nor are they really complete theories, because
they contain a number of parameters whose values cannot be predicted
from the theory but have to be chosen to fit in with experiment.
Nevertheless, they may be a step toward a complete, fully unified
theory. The basic idea of GUTs is as follows: as was mentioned above,
the strong nuclear force gets weaker at high energies. On the other
hand, the electromagnetic and weak forces, which are not asymptotically
free, get stronger at high energies. At some very high energy, called
the grand unification energy, these three forces would all have
the same strength and so could just be different aspects of a single
force. The GUTs also predict that at this energy the different spin-½
matter particles, like quarks and electrons, would also all be essentially
the same, thus achieving another unification.
The
value of the grand unification energy is not very well known, but
it would probably have to be at least a thousand million million
GeV. The present generation of particle accelerators can collide
particles at energies of about one hundred GeV, and machines are
planned that would raise this to a few thousand GeV. But a machine
that was powerful enough to accelerate particles to the grand unification
energy would have to be as big as the Solar System and would
be unlikely to be funded in the present economic climate. Thus it
is impossible to test grand unified theories directly in the laboratory.
However, just as in the case of the electromagnetic and weak unified
theory, there are low-energy consequences of the theory that can
be tested.
The
most interesting of these is the prediction that protons, which
make up much of the mass of ordinary matter, can spontaneously decay
into lighter particles such as antielectrons. The reason this is
possible is that at the grand unification energy there is no essential
difference between a quark and an antielectron. The three quarks
inside a proton normally do not have enough energy to change into
antielectrons, but very occasionally one of them may acquire sufficient
energy to make the transition because the uncertainty principle
means that the energy of the quarks inside the proton cannot be
fixed exactly. The proton would then decay. The probability of a
quark gaining sufficient energy is so low that one is likely to
have to wait at least a million million million million million
years (1 followed by thirty zeros). This is much longer than the
time since the big bang, which is a mere ten thousand million years
or so (1 followed by ten zeros). Thus one might think that the possibility
of spontaneous proton decay could not be tested experimentally.
However, one can increase ones chances of detecting a decay
by observing a large amount of matter containing a very large number
of protons. (If, for example, one observed a number of protons equal
to 1 followed by thirty-one zeros for a period of one year, one
would expect, according to the simplest GUT, to observe more than
one proton decay.)
A
number of such experiments have been carried out, but none have
yielded definite evidence of proton or neutron decay. One experiment
used eight thousand tons of water and was performed in the Morton
Salt Mine in Ohio (to avoid other events taking place, caused by
cosmic rays, that might be confused with proton decay). Since no
spontaneous proton decay had been observed during the experiment,
one can calculate that the probable life of the proton must be greater
than ten million million million million million years (1 with thirty-one
zeros). This is longer than the lifetime predicted by the simplest
grand unified theory, but there are more elaborate theories in which
the predicted lifetimes are longer. Still more sensitive experiments
involving even larger quantities of matter will be needed to test
them.
Even
though it is very difficult to observe spontaneous proton decay,
it may be that our very existence is a consequence of the reverse
process, the production of protons, or more simply, of quarks, from
an initial situation in which there were no more quarks than antiquarks,
which is the most natural way to imagine the universe starting out.
Matter on the earth is made up mainly of protons and neutrons, which
in turn are made up of quarks. There are no antiprotons or antineutrons,
made up from antiquarks, except for a few that physicists produce
in large particle accelerators. We have evidence from cosmic rays
that the same is true for all the matter in our galaxy: there are
no antiprotons or antineutrons apart from a small number that are
produced as particle/ antiparticle pairs in high-energy collisions.
If there were large regions of antimatter in our galaxy, we would
expect to observe large quantities of radiation from the borders
between the regions of matter and antimatter, where many particles
would be colliding with their anti-particles, annihilating each
other and giving off high-energy radiation.
We
have no direct evidence as to whether the matter in other galaxies
is made up of protons and neutrons or antiprotons and anti-neutrons,
but it must be one or the other: there cannot be a mixture in a
single galaxy because in that case we would again observe a lot
of radiation from annihilations. We therefore believe that all galaxies
are composed of quarks rather than antiquarks; it seems implausible
that some galaxies should be matter and some antimatter.
Why
should there be so many more quarks than antiquarks? Why are there
not equal numbers of each? It is certainly fortunate for us that
the numbers are unequal because, if they had been the same, nearly
all the quarks and antiquarks would have annihilated each other
in the early universe and left a universe filled with radiation
but hardly any matter. There would then have been no galaxies, stars,
or planets on which human life could have developed. Luckily, grand
unified theories may provide an explanation of why the universe
should now contain more quarks than antiquarks, even if it started
out with equal numbers of each. As we have seen, GUTs allow quarks
to change into antielectrons at high energy. They also allow the
reverse processes, antiquarks turning into electrons, and electrons
and antielectrons turning into antiquarks and quarks. There was
a time in the very early universe when it was so hot that the particle
energies would have been high enough for these transformations to
take place. But why should that lead to more quarks than antiquarks?
The reason is that the laws of physics are not quite the same for
particles and antiparticles.
Up
to 1956 it was believed that the laws of physics obeyed each of
three separate symmetries called C, P, and T. The symmetry C means
that the laws are the same for particles and antiparticles. The
symmetry P means that the laws are the same for any situation and
its mirror image (the mirror image of a particle spinning in a right-handed
direction is one spinning in a left-handed direction). The symmetry
T means that if you reverse the direction of motion of all particles
and antiparticles, the system should go back to what it was at earlier
times; in other words, the laws are the same in the forward and
backward directions of time. In 1956 two American physicists, Tsung-Dao
Lee and Chen Ning Yang, suggested that the weak force does not in
fact obey the symmetry P. In other words, the weak force would make
the universe develop in a different way from the way in which the
mirror image of the universe would develop. The same year, a colleague,
Chien-Shiung Wu, proved their prediction correct. She did this by
lining up the nuclei of radioactive atoms in a magnetic field, so
that they were all spinning in the same direction, and showed that
the electrons were given off more in one direction than another.
The following year, Lee and Yang received the Nobel Prize for their
idea. It was also found that the weak force did not obey the symmetry
C. That is, it would cause a universe composed of antiparticles
to behave differently from our universe. Nevertheless, it seemed
that the weak force did obey the combined symmetry CP. That is,
the universe would develop in the same way as its mirror image if,
in addition, every particle was swapped with its antiparticle! However,
in 1964 two more Americans, J. W. Cronin and Val Fitch, discovered
that even the CP symmetry was not obeyed in the decay of certain
particles called K-mesons. Cronin and Fitch eventually received
the Nobel Prize for their work in 1980. (A lot of prizes have been
awarded for showing that the universe is not as simple as we might
have thought!)
There
is a mathematical theorem that says that any theory that obeys quantum
mechanics and relativity must always obey the combined symmetry
CPT. In other words, the universe would have to behave the same
if one replaced particles by antiparticles, took the mirror image,
and also reversed the direction of time. But Cronin and Fitch showed
that if one replaces particles by antiparticles and takes the mirror
image, but does not reverse the direction of time, then the universe
does not behave the same. The laws of physics, therefore,
must change if one reverses the direction of time they do
not obey the symmetry T.
Certainly
the early universe does not obey the symmetry T: as time runs forward
the universe expands if it ran backward, the universe would
be contracting. And since there are forces that do not obey the
symmetry T, it follows that as the universe expands, these forces
could cause more antielectrons to turn into quarks than electrons
into antiquarks. Then, as the universe expanded and cooled, the
antiquarks would annihilate with the quarks, but since there would
be more quarks than antiquarks, a small excess of quarks would remain.
It is these that make up the matter we see today and out of which
we ourselves are made. Thus our very existence could be regarded
as a confirmation of grand unified theories, though a qualitative
one only; the uncertainties are such that one cannot predict the
numbers of quarks that will be left after the annihilation, or even
whether it would be quarks or antiquarks that would remain. (Had
it been an excess of antiquarks, however, we would simply have named
antiquarks quarks, and quarks antiquarks.)
Grand
unified theories do not include the force of gravity. This does
not matter too much, because gravity is such a weak force that its
effects can usually be neglected when we are dealing with elementary
particles or atoms. However, the fact that it is both long range
and always attractive means that its effects all add up. So for
a sufficiently large number of matter particles, gravitational forces
can dominate over all other forces. This is why it is gravity that
determines the evolution of the universe. Even for objects the size
of stars, the attractive force of gravity can win over all the other
forces and cause the star to collapse. My work in the 1970s focused
on the black holes that can result from such stellar collapse and
the intense gravitational fields around them. It was this that led
to the first hints of how the theories of quantum mechanics and
general relativity might affect each other a glimpse of the
shape of a quantum theory of gravity yet to come.
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