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The Elegant Universe - Key Terms
Key terms from the Elegant Universe by Brian Greene
48
Physics
Undergraduate 1
06/06/2011

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Term
Antimatter
Definition
Matter with the same gravitational properties as regular matter, but with an opposite electric charge and opposite nuclear force charges.
Term
Antiparticle
Definition
A particle of antimatter.
Term
Big bang
Definition
The widely accepted theory concerning the origin of the universe. The big bang theory posits that the universe evolved approximately 10 to 15 billion years ago from the explosion of an incredibly dense, hot substance that was contained at one point. The universe has been expanding since the first fraction of a second after the big bang occurred.
Term
Big crunch
Definition
The term referring to what some physicists believe will happen when the expanding universe stops and implodes. When the big crunch occurs, according to the theory, all space and matter will collapse together.
Term
Black hole
Definition
A region of space formed when a giant star collapses and all of its mass compresses to a single point, forming a gravitational field so overpowering that it traps anything that comes close to it, including light.
Term
Boson
Definition
A pattern of string vibration with an amount of spin measurable in whole numbers. A boson is most often a messenger particle.
Term
Bosonic string theory
Definition
The first version of string theory. Bosonic string theory, which dealt with string’s vibrational patterns, emerged in the 1970s. This version was later revised and replaced by supersymmetrical string theory.
Term
Calabi-Yau shape/space
Definition
A theoretical configuration that many physicists believe might contain the additional dimension string theory requires. Many thousands of such possible configurations exist, but string theory has yet to verify the correct one.
Term
Electromagnetism/electromagnetic force
Definition
One of the four fundamental forces, along with gravity, the strong force, and the weak force. Electromagnetism determines all types of electromagnetic radiation, including light, X-rays, and radio waves.
Term
Electroweak theory
Definition
A relativistic quantum field theory that describes the weak force and the electromagnetic force within a single framework.
Term
Elegance
Definition
To Greene, string theory defines elegance because it is extremely simple, but it may explain every event in the universe.
Term
Elementary particle
Definition
The indivisible or “uncuttable” unit found in all matter and forces. Elementary particles are now categorized by quarks and leptons, and their antimatter counterparts.
Term
Equivalence principle
Definition
The basic tenet of general relativity. The equivalence principle states that accelerated motion is indistinguishable from gravity. It generalizes the theory of relativity by showing that all observers, regardless of their state of motion, can say that they are at rest, provided they take the presence of a gravitational field into account.
Term
Flop transitions
Definition
Also called topography-changing transitions. Flop transitions are the act of Calabi-Yau space ripping and repairing itself.
Term
Force carrier particle
Definition
A particle that transmits one of the four fundamental forces. The strong force is associated with gluon; electromagnetism with the photon; the weak force with W and Z; and graviton (which hasn’t yet been discovered) with gravity.
Term
Fundamental force
Definition
There are four fundamental forces : electromagnetism, strong force, weak force, and gravity.
Term
General theory of relativity
Definition
Albert Einstein’s formulation that gravity results from the warping of spacetime. Through this curvature, space and time communicate the gravitational force.
Term
Graviton
Definition
Physicists believe that graviton—which has not yet been proven to exist—is the particle carrier of the gravitational force.
Term
Gravity
Definition
The weakest and most mysterious of the four fundamental forces. Gravity acts over an infinite range, and gravitation describes the force of attraction between objects containing either mass or energy.
Term
M-theory
Definition
The theory under which all five previous versions of string theory fall. The most recent synthesis of string theory ideas, M-theory predicts eleven spacetime dimensions and describes “membranes” as a fundamental element in nature.
Term
Mirror symmetry
Definition
A precept of string theory that demonstrates how two different Calabi-Yau shapes have identical physics.
Term
Newton’s laws of motion
Definition
Laws of motion based on an absolute and unchanging notion of space and time. Newton’s laws of motion were later replaced by Einstein’s theory of special relativity.
Term
Particle accelerator
Definition
A machine that speeds up the movement of particles and then either shoots them out at a fixed target or makes them collide. Particle accelerators allow physicists to study the movement of particles in extreme conditions.
Term
Perturbation theory
Definition
A formal framework for making approximate calculations. Perturbation theory is a linchpin of string theory in its current form. The approximate solution will be refined later as more details fall into place.
Term
Photon
Definition
The smallest bundle of light. Photons are the messenger particles of the electromagnetic force.
Term
Photoelectric effect
Definition
The action of electrons shooting from a metallic surface when light is shone onto that surface.
Term
Planck energy
Definition
The energy required to probe Planck-length-scale distances.
Term
Planck length
Definition
Planck length—approximately 10–33 centimeters—is the scale at which quantum fluctuations occur. Planck length is also the size of a typical string.
Term
Planck mass
Definition
Planck mass is roughly equal to the mass of a grain of dust, or ten billion billion times the mass of a proton.
Term
Planck’s constant
Definition
Planck’s constant is also known (and written) as the “h-bar.” It is a fundamental component of quantum mechanics.
Term
Planck tension
Definition
About 10 (to the 39th power) tons. Planck tension is equal to the tension of a typical string.
Term
Quanta
Definition
According to the laws of quantum mechanics, the smallest physical unit that something can be broken into. Photons are the quanta of the electromagnetic field.
Term
Quantum field theory
Definition
Also known as relativistic quantum field theory. Quantum field theory describes particles in terms of fields, as well as how particles can be created or annihilated, and how they scatter.
Term
Quantum foam
Definition
Also known as spacetime foam. Quantum foam is the violent turbulence of spatial fabric at an ultramicroscopic scale. Its existence is one of the chief reasons that quantum mechanics is incompatible with general relativity.
Term
Quantum mechanics
Definition
The framework of laws that describe matter on atomic and subatomic scales. The uncertainty principle is a pillar of quantum mechanics.
Term
Quarks
Definition
A family of elementary particles (matter or antimatter) that make up protons and neutrons. There are many types of quarks: up, charm, top, down, strange, and bottom. Quarks are acted upon by the strong force. Murray Gell-Mann named quarks after he read James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake.
Term
Special theory of relativity
Definition
Einstein’s description of particle motion, which hinges on the constancy of the speed of light. The theory of relativity states that even if an observer is moving, the speed of light never changes. Distance, time, and mass, however, all depend on the observer’s relative motion.
Term
Spin
Definition
The theory that all particles have an intrinsic amount of spin in either whole- or half-integer denominations.
Term
Standard model
Definition
A quantum model that explains three of the fundamental forces—electromagnetism, the strong force, and the weak force—but does not take gravity into consideration.
Term
String
Definition
Miniscule one-dimensional vibrating strands of energy. String theories posit that these filaments are the basis of all elementary particles. The length of a string is 10–33 cm; strings have no width.
Term
Strong force
Definition
So called because it is the strongest of the four fundamental forces. It holds quarks together and keeps protons and neutrons in the nuclei of atoms.
Term
Superstring theory
Definition
A theory that describes resonant strings as the most elementary units in nature.
Term
Supersymmetry
Definition
A principle of symmetry relating the properties of particles with a whole-number quantity of spin (bosons) to those with half a whole number of spin (fermions). Supersymmetry posits that all elementary matter particles have corresponding superpartner force carrier particles. No one has yet observed these theoretical superpartners, which are thought to be even larger than their counterparts.
Term
Tachyon
Definition
A particle that has a negative mass when squared. The existence of a tachyon usually indicates a problem with a theory.
Term
Topology
Definition
The study of geometric figures’ properties that exhibit ongoing transformations and are unchanged by stretching or bending.
Term
Uncertainty principle
Definition
Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle is the crux of quantum mechanics. It proclaims that you can never know both the position and the velocity of a particle simultaneously. To isolate one, you must somehow blur the other.
Term
Unified field theory
Definition
A theory describing all four fundamental forces and all of matter within a single framework.
Term
Weak force
Definition
One of the four fundamental forces. Weak force operates over a short range.
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