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Most things that appear complex are built from a surprisingly small number of underlying components.
If you want to look beneath the surface, start here.
Look up.
Every star you see, every atom in your fingertips, is built from the same short list of pieces.
This is the map.
Twelve particles. That is almost all of it.
All matter we have ever directly detected is made from twelve particles: six quarks and six leptons. They come in three generations of increasing mass. We live in the first.
Three forces. Three messengers.
Matter does nothing on its own. Every interaction in the Standard Model is carried by a particle. Light, nuclear binding, radioactivity. Each has a messenger.
The reason anything has weight.
A field, everywhere. Fill it into every empty space in the universe, because it is already there. Particles move through it.
Some particles move through unaffected. Photons, for example, have no mass. They slip through the Higgs field as if it were not there.
Other particles drag through it. The more they drag, the heavier they are. What we call mass is really the friction of passing through a field.
The Standard Model is incomplete.
It is the most precisely tested theory we have, and almost everything it predicts has been confirmed. But step back, and most of the universe is missing from it.
- Gravity. The one force we experience most directly has no place in the Standard Model. It is missing entirely.
- Dark matter. Galaxies rotate as if there is five times more matter than we can see. We have never directly detected what it is.
- Dark energy. Something is pushing the universe apart at an accelerating rate. We do not know what.
- Neutrino mass. Neutrinos have mass, but the Standard Model was built assuming they did not. The theory needs revision.
- Matter without a partner. The big bang should have made equal amounts of matter and antimatter. There is a small, enormous asymmetry we cannot yet explain.
It took 115 years to build the map.
The universe fits in a diagram that would cover one wall of a classroom.
The parts we still cannot draw cover the other 95 percent of everything there is.
Source reference: U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science.