33.6 GUTS: The Unification of Forces Present quests to show that the four basic forces are different manifestations of a single unified force follow a long tradition. In the 19th century, the distinct electric and magnetic forces were shown to be intimately connected and are now collectively called the electromagnetic force. More recently, the weak nuclear force has been shown to be connected to the electromagnetic force in a manner suggesting that a theory may be constructed in which all four forces are unified. Certainly, there are similarities in how forces are transmitted by the exchange of carrier particles, and the carrier particles themselves (the gauge bosons in Table 33.2) are also similar in important ways. The analogy to the unification of electric and magnetic forces is quite good the four forces are distinct under normal circumstances, but there are hints of connections even on the atomic scale, and there may be conditions under which the forces are intimately related and even indistinguishable. The search for a correct theory linking the forces, called the Grand Unified Theory (GUT), is explored in this section in the realm of particle physics. Frontiers of Physics expands the story in making a connection with cosmology, on the opposite end of the distance scale. Figure 33.21 is a Feynman diagram showing how the weak nuclear force is transmitted by the carrier particle zº, similar to the diagrams in Figure 33.5 and Figure 33.6 for the electromagnetic and strong nuclear forces. In the 1960s, a gauge theory, called electroweak theory, was developed by Steven Weinberg, Sheldon Glashow, and Abdus Salam and proposed that the electromagnetic and weak forces are identical at sufficiently high energies. One of its predictions, in addition to describing both electromagnetic and weak force phenomena, was the existence of the W*,w, and z° carrier particles. Not only were three particles having spin 1 predicted, the mass of the W* and W was predicted to be 81 GeVIc² , and that of the z° was predicted to be 90 GeV/c2 . (Their masses had to be about 1000 times that of the pion, or about 100 GeV/c? , since the range of the weak force is about 1000 times less than the strong force carried by virtual pions.) In 1983, these carrier particles were observed at CERN with the predicted characteristics, including masses having the predicted values as seen in Table 33.2. This was another triumph of particle theory and experimental effort, resulting in the 1984 Nobel Prize to the experiment's group leaders Carlo Rubbia and Simon van der Meer. Theorists Weinberg, Glashow, and Salam had already been honored with the 1979 Nobel Prize for other aspects of electroweak theory.

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 GUTs: The Unification of Forces
• State the grand unified theory.
• Explain the electroweak theory.
• Define gluons.
• Describe the principle of quantum chromodynamics.
• Define the standard model.

33.6 GUTS: The Unification of Forces
Present quests to show that the four basic forces are different manifestations of a single unified force follow a long tradition. In
the 19th century, the distinct electric and magnetic forces were shown to be intimately connected and are now collectively called
the electromagnetic force. More recently, the weak nuclear force has been shown to be connected to the electromagnetic force in
a manner suggesting that a theory may be constructed in which all four forces are unified. Certainly, there are similarities in how
forces are transmitted by the exchange of carrier particles, and the carrier particles themselves (the gauge bosons in Table 33.2)
are also similar in important ways. The analogy to the unification of electric and magnetic forces is quite good the four forces
are distinct under normal circumstances, but there are hints of connections even on the atomic scale, and there may be
conditions under which the forces are intimately related and even indistinguishable. The search for a correct theory linking the
forces, called the Grand Unified Theory (GUT), is explored in this section in the realm of particle physics. Frontiers of Physics
expands the story in making a connection with cosmology, on the opposite end of the distance scale.
Figure 33.21 is a Feynman diagram showing how the weak nuclear force is transmitted by the carrier particle zº, similar to the
diagrams in Figure 33.5 and Figure 33.6 for the electromagnetic and strong nuclear forces. In the 1960s, a gauge theory, called
electroweak theory, was developed by Steven Weinberg, Sheldon Glashow, and Abdus Salam and proposed that the
electromagnetic and weak forces are identical at sufficiently high energies. One of its predictions, in addition to describing both
electromagnetic and weak force phenomena, was the existence of the W*,w, and z° carrier particles. Not only were three
particles having spin 1 predicted, the mass of the W* and W was predicted to be 81 GeVIc² , and that of the z° was
predicted to be 90 GeV/c2 . (Their masses had to be about 1000 times that of the pion, or about 100 GeV/c? , since the
range of the weak force is about 1000 times less than the strong force carried by virtual pions.) In 1983, these carrier particles
were observed at CERN with the predicted characteristics, including masses having the predicted values as seen in Table 33.2.
This was another triumph of particle theory and experimental effort, resulting in the 1984 Nobel Prize to the experiment's group
leaders Carlo Rubbia and Simon van der Meer. Theorists Weinberg, Glashow, and Salam had already been honored with the
1979 Nobel Prize for other aspects of electroweak theory.
Transcribed Image Text:33.6 GUTS: The Unification of Forces Present quests to show that the four basic forces are different manifestations of a single unified force follow a long tradition. In the 19th century, the distinct electric and magnetic forces were shown to be intimately connected and are now collectively called the electromagnetic force. More recently, the weak nuclear force has been shown to be connected to the electromagnetic force in a manner suggesting that a theory may be constructed in which all four forces are unified. Certainly, there are similarities in how forces are transmitted by the exchange of carrier particles, and the carrier particles themselves (the gauge bosons in Table 33.2) are also similar in important ways. The analogy to the unification of electric and magnetic forces is quite good the four forces are distinct under normal circumstances, but there are hints of connections even on the atomic scale, and there may be conditions under which the forces are intimately related and even indistinguishable. The search for a correct theory linking the forces, called the Grand Unified Theory (GUT), is explored in this section in the realm of particle physics. Frontiers of Physics expands the story in making a connection with cosmology, on the opposite end of the distance scale. Figure 33.21 is a Feynman diagram showing how the weak nuclear force is transmitted by the carrier particle zº, similar to the diagrams in Figure 33.5 and Figure 33.6 for the electromagnetic and strong nuclear forces. In the 1960s, a gauge theory, called electroweak theory, was developed by Steven Weinberg, Sheldon Glashow, and Abdus Salam and proposed that the electromagnetic and weak forces are identical at sufficiently high energies. One of its predictions, in addition to describing both electromagnetic and weak force phenomena, was the existence of the W*,w, and z° carrier particles. Not only were three particles having spin 1 predicted, the mass of the W* and W was predicted to be 81 GeVIc² , and that of the z° was predicted to be 90 GeV/c2 . (Their masses had to be about 1000 times that of the pion, or about 100 GeV/c? , since the range of the weak force is about 1000 times less than the strong force carried by virtual pions.) In 1983, these carrier particles were observed at CERN with the predicted characteristics, including masses having the predicted values as seen in Table 33.2. This was another triumph of particle theory and experimental effort, resulting in the 1984 Nobel Prize to the experiment's group leaders Carlo Rubbia and Simon van der Meer. Theorists Weinberg, Glashow, and Salam had already been honored with the 1979 Nobel Prize for other aspects of electroweak theory.
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