 |
 |  |
 |  | 
Jonathan Bagger, of Johns Hopkins University, explains how string theory has the potential to make Einstein's dream of a single grand unified force come true. View the Video |
|
 |
 |  |
 |
At the most fundamental level, particles and forces
may converge, either through hidden principles
like grand unification, or through radical physics
like superstrings. We already know that remarkably
similar mathematical laws and principles describe
all the known forces except gravity. Perhaps all
forces are different manifestations of a single
grand unified force, a force that would relate
quarks to leptons and predict new ways of converting
one kind of particle into another. Such a force might
eventually make protons decay, rendering ordinary
matter unstable.
High-energy particle physics experiments are exploring the
unification of the weak and electromagnetic forces. Does
the unification continue? At the most fundamental level,
particles and forces may be related, either through hidden
symmetries like grand unification, or through radical
physics like superstrings. Essential clues can come from
laboratory observations of extremely rare particle decays
and other rare processes, as well as from precision
measurements at the highest energies. Such breadth of
approach is necessary because we do not know where the
clues will appear.
 |
 |  |
 | 
| The laws of physics distill our observations about what can and cannot happen in the physical world... read more |
|
 |  |
 |  |
 |
Models of grand unification predict that protons
may eventually decay, rendering ordinary matter
unstable. The Super Kamiokande detector already
has sensitivity to proton decay in the range
suggested by models of grand unification. The
next generation of proton decay experiments will
require larger detectors in an underground laboratory.
Unification physics represents a natural mechanism to
provide Majorana masses for neutrinos, in which case
neutrinos are their own antiparticles. This possibility
could be verified by a positive signal in the next
generation of neutrinoless double beta decay experiments,
for example EXO or Majorana, at an underground laboratory.
The precision measurements of the force strengths at LEP
and SLC provided circumstantial evidence for grand
unification. Similarly the precision measurement of
(super)particle masses at a Linear Collider will permit
multiple quantitative tests of grand unification.
Ultimately, unification of all the fundamental forces
requires an understanding of quantum gravity and the
associated exotic phenomena, such as black hole evaporation.
Progress could come serendipitously from a discovery of
extra dimensions at the LHC, or of anomalous gravity wave
sources with LIGO, or of unexpected events in ultra-high-energy
cosmic rays, including cosmic neutrinos.
|