Aarva

How Many Elementary Particles Are There, Really?


Listen Later

Why is the number of fundamental particles in the universe a question of scale rather than a fact?

Quanta Magazine published this piece earlier this week, and it wrestles with a question that feels like it should have a simple numerical answer. While a classroom poster might list seventeen elementary particles, the math suggests a much noisier census. The piece looks at the Standard Model not as a static list, but as a shifting set of degrees of freedom that change depending on how closely one looks. It offers a way to think about why the most fundamental building blocks of reality remain so difficult to count.

An examination of the challenges inherent in tallying the fundamental particles of the Standard Model of particle physics. The census expands from the 17 particles typically found on classroom posters to more complex counts involving antiparticles, color charges, and chirality. A mathematical proof regarding degrees of freedom suggests the true number of variations is 995.5.

Read at source: Quanta Magazine
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

AarvaBy Aarva