
So the Standard Model still works well despite its reluctant exclusion of one of the fundamental forces. Only when matter is in bulk, at the scale of the human body or of the planets for example, does the effect of gravity dominate. But luckily for particle physics, when it comes to the minuscule scale of particles, the effect of gravity is so weak as to be negligible. No one has managed to make the two mathematically compatible in the context of the Standard Model. The quantum theory used to describe the micro world, and the general theory of relativity used to describe the macro world, are difficult to fit into a single framework. However, the most familiar force in our everyday lives, gravity, is not part of the Standard Model, as fitting gravity comfortably into this framework has proved to be a difficult challenge. The Standard Model includes the electromagnetic, strong and weak forces and all their carrier particles, and explains well how these forces act on all of the matter particles.

Although not yet found, the “graviton” should be the corresponding force-carrying particle of gravity. Each fundamental force has its own corresponding boson – the strong force is carried by the “gluon”, the electromagnetic force is carried by the “photon”, and the “W and Z bosons” are responsible for the weak force. Particles of matter transfer discrete amounts of energy by exchanging bosons with each other. Three of the fundamental forces result from the exchange of force-carrier particles, which belong to a broader group called “bosons”. The strong force, as the name suggests, is the strongest of all four fundamental interactions. Despite its name, the weak force is much stronger than gravity but it is indeed the weakest of the other three. The weak and strong forces are effective only over a very short range and dominate only at the level of subatomic particles. The electromagnetic force also has infinite range but it is many times stronger than gravity. Gravity is the weakest but it has an infinite range. They work over different ranges and have different strengths.

There are four fundamental forces at work in the universe: the strong force, the weak force, the electromagnetic force, and the gravitational force. The electron, the muon and the tau all have an electric charge and a sizeable mass, whereas the neutrinos are electrically neutral and have very little mass. The six leptons are similarly arranged in three generations – the “electron” and the “electron neutrino”, the “muon” and the “muon neutrino”, and the “tau” and the “tau neutrino”. Quarks also come in three different “colours” and only mix in such ways as to form colourless objects. The six quarks are paired in three generations – the “up quark” and the “down quark” form the first generation, followed by the “charm quark” and “strange quark”, then the “top quark” and “bottom (or beauty) quark”. All stable matter in the universe is made from particles that belong to the first generation any heavier particles quickly decay to more stable ones.

The lightest and most stable particles make up the first generation, whereas the heavier and less-stable particles belong to the second and third generations.

Each group consists of six particles, which are related in pairs, or “generations”. These particles occur in two basic types called quarks and leptons. All matter around us is made of elementary particles, the building blocks of matter.
