| Topic: |
Science > Physics |
| User: |
"" |
| Date: |
25 Mar 2007 03:15:01 AM |
| Object: |
Electrowak force? |
I've read that the Elecromagnetic force unifies with the nuclear weak
one in high energies, and it's assumed they merge with the strong one
in even higher ones. How is it possible? The electromagnetic affects
all charged particles, while the strong nuclear only Hadrons??
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| User: "PD" |
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| Title: Re: Electrowak force? |
26 Mar 2007 01:10:02 PM |
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On Mar 25, 3:15 am, wrote:
I've read that the Elecromagnetic force unifies with the nuclear weak
one in high energies, and it's assumed they merge with the strong one
in even higher ones. How is it possible? The electromagnetic affects
all charged particles, while the strong nuclear only Hadrons??
At lower temperatures (like ours), a highly symmetric universe breaks
symmetry spontaneously -- like the formation of a layer of ice on top
of a pool of water. When this happens, both the bosons and the
fermions they are swapped between take on non-symmetric aspects.
PD
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