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万物简史英文版_比尔·布莱森-第章

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ces: the strong and weak nuclearforces and electromagnetism。

the arrangement essentially is that among the basic building blocks of matter are quarks;these are held together by particles called gluons; and together quarks and gluons formprotons and neutrons; the stuff of the atom鈥檚 nucleus。 leptons are the source of electrons andneutrinos。 quarks and leptons together are called fermions。 bosons (named for the indianphysicist s。 n。 bose) are particles that produce and carry forces; and include photons andgluons。 the higgs boson may or may not actually exist; it was invented simply as a way ofendowing particles with mass。

it is all; as you can see; just a little unwieldy; but it is the simplest model that can explainall that happens in the world of particles。 most particle physicists feel; as leon ledermanremarked in a 1985 pbs documentary; that the standard model lacks elegance and simplicity。

鈥渋t is too plicated。 it has too many arbitrary parameters;鈥潯ederman said。 鈥渨e don鈥檛 reallysee the creator twiddling twenty knobs to set twenty parameters to create the universe as weknow it。鈥潯hysics is really nothing more than a search for ultimate simplicity; but so far all wehave is a kind of elegant messiness鈥攐r as lederman put it: 鈥渢here is a deep feeling that thepicture is not beautiful。鈥

the standard model is not only ungainly but inplete。 for one thing; it has nothing at allto say about gravity。 search through the standard model as you will; and you won鈥檛 findanything to explain why when you place a hat on a table it doesn鈥檛 float up to the ceiling。 nor;as we鈥檝e just noted; can it explain mass。 in order to give particles any mass at all we have tointroduce the notional higgs boson; whether it actually exists is a matter for twenty…first…century physics。 as feynman cheerfully observed: 鈥渟o we are stuck with a theory; and we donot know whether it is right or wrong; but we do know that it is a little wrong; or at leastinplete。鈥

in an attempt to draw everything together; physicists have e up with something calledsuperstring theory。 this postulates that all those little things like quarks and leptons that wehad previously thought of as particles are actually 鈥渟trings鈥濃攙ibrating strands of energy thatoscillate in eleven dimensions; consisting of the three we know already plus time and sevenother dimensions that are; well; unknowable to us。 the strings are very tiny鈥攖iny enough topass for point particles。

by introducing extra dimensions; superstring theory enables physicists to pull togetherquantum laws and gravitational ones into one paratively tidy package; but it also meansthat anything scientists say about the theory begins to sound worryingly like the sort ofthoughts that would make you edge away if conveyed to you by a stranger on a park bench。

here; for example; is the physicist michio kaku explaining the structure of the universe froma superstring perspective: 鈥渢he heterotic string consists of a closed string that has two types ofvibrations; clockwise and counterclockwise; which are treated differently。 the clockwisevibrations live in a ten…dimensional space。 the counterclockwise live in a twenty…six…dimensional space; of which sixteen dimensions have been pactified。 (we recall that inkaluza鈥檚 original five…dimensional; the fifth dimension was pactified by being wrappedup into a circle。)鈥潯nd so it goes; for some 350 pages。

string theory has further spawned something called 鈥渕 theory;鈥潯hich incorporatessurfaces known as membranes鈥攐r simply 鈥渂ranes鈥潯o the hipper souls of the world ofphysics。 i鈥檓 afraid this is the stop on the knowledge highway where most of us must get off。

here is a sentence from the new york times; explaining this as simply as possible to a generalaudience: 鈥渢he ekpyrotic process begins far in the indefinite past with a pair of flat emptybranes sitting parallel to each other in a warped five…dimensional space。 。 。 。 the two branes;which form the walls of the fifth dimension; could have popped out of nothingness as aquantum fluctuation in the even more distant past and then drifted apart。鈥潯o arguing withthat。 no understanding it either。 ekpyrotic; incidentally; es from the greek word for鈥渃onflagration。鈥

matters in physics have now reached such a pitch that; as paul davies noted in nature; it is鈥渁lmost impossible for the non…scientist to discriminate between the legitimately weird andthe outright crackpot。鈥潯he question came interestingly to a head in the fall of 2002 when twofrench physicists; twin brothers igor and grickha bogdanov; produced a theory of ambitiousdensity involving such concepts as 鈥渋maginary time鈥潯nd the 鈥渒ubo…schwinger…martincondition;鈥潯nd purporting to describe the nothingness that was the universe before the bigbang鈥攁 period that was always assumed to be unknowable (since it predated the birth ofphysics and its properties)。

almost at once the bogdanov paper excited debate among physicists as to whether it wastwaddle; a work of genius; or a hoax。 鈥渟cientifically; it鈥檚 clearly more or less pletenonsense;鈥潯olumbia university physicist peter woit told the new york times; 鈥渂ut thesedays that doesn鈥檛 much distinguish it from a lot of the rest of the literature。鈥

karl popper; whom steven weinberg has called 鈥渢he dean of modern philosophers ofscience;鈥潯nce suggested that there may not be an ultimate theory for physics鈥攖hat; rather;every explanation may require a further explanation; producing 鈥渁n infinite chain of more andmore fundamental principles。鈥潯 rival possibility is that such knowledge may simply bebeyond us。 鈥渟o far; fortunately;鈥潯rites weinberg in dreams of a final theory; 鈥渨e do notseem to be ing to the end of our intellectual resources。鈥

almost certainly this is an area that will see further developments of thought; and almostcertainly these thoughts will again be beyond most of us。

while physicists in the middle decades of the twentieth…century were looking perplexedlyinto the world of the very small; astronomers were finding no less arresting an inpletenessof understanding in the universe at large。

when we last met edwin hubble; h
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