Weak force

From Knowino
Jump to: navigation, search

The weak force is the force that is responsible for some forms of radioactivity. It is one of the four fundamental forces; the others are electromagnetism, gravity and the strong force. The weak force and the strong force only act on a very short range, within the nucleus of an atom. Of these two nuclear forces, the weak force is the weaker, hence the name.

Some radioactive materials undergo a process called beta decay, in which a proton in the nucleus is converted in a neutron, or a neutron in a proton. However, a proton has a positive electric charge while a neutron has no charge. So that the law of conservation of electric charge is not violated, another particle with a positive charge (a positron) is created when a proton changes in a neutron. Positrons are also called beta particles, and hence the name beta decay. In fact, there is another particle which is created together with the positron; this is the elusive neutrino.

On a more fundamental level, both a proton and a neutron consist of three quarks. In the case of a proton, these are two up quarks and one down quark, while a neutron consists of two down quarks and one up quark. The weak force changes a proton in a neutron by changing an up quark to a down quark and creating another particle, the W boson. This W boson decays in the positron and neutrino which are emitted during beta decay.

Information.svg Some content on this page may previously have appeared on Citizendium.
Personal tools
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Community
Toolbox