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The Four Fundamental Forces: The Complete Set of Rules That Run the Universe

March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

The Fact

The four fundamental forces of nature are gravity, electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force, and the weak nuclear force.

Four Rules That Govern Everything

Physics, at its most ambitious, seeks to explain all physical phenomena in terms of a small number of fundamental principles. By the 20th century, that ambition had resolved into a remarkably clean picture: everything that happens in the physical universe — every collision, chemical reaction, nuclear decay, planetary orbit, and spark of lightning — can be attributed to the action of just four distinct forces. No more are known to exist, and the classification has survived every experimental test conducted so far.

These four forces differ in their strength, their range, the particles they act upon, and the carrier particles that mediate them. Together they account for the entire dynamics of the observable universe.

Gravity and Electromagnetism

Gravity is the weakest of the four fundamental forces by an enormous margin — roughly 10³⁶ times weaker than electromagnetism at the scale of subatomic particles. Yet it dominates at large scales because it is always attractive, acts on all mass and energy, and has infinite range. Gravity governs the orbits of planets, the collapse of stars, the formation of galaxies, and the expansion of the universe itself. Despite being the force most familiar in everyday life, gravity is the least well understood at the quantum level — no fully satisfactory quantum theory of gravity exists, and reconciling general relativity with quantum mechanics remains one of the central unsolved problems in physics.

Electromagnetism is vastly stronger than gravity at atomic scales and governs all interactions between electrically charged particles. It holds electrons in atoms, bonds atoms into molecules, drives chemical reactions, produces light, and is responsible for essentially all the forces we experience in daily life beyond gravity — including friction, structural rigidity, and every biological process in our bodies. Electromagnetism is mediated by the photon and has infinite range, but unlike gravity it can be either attractive or repulsive, and opposite charges tend to cancel at large scales, which is why electromagnetism does not dominate over gravity for macroscopic objects.

The Strong and Weak Nuclear Forces

The strong nuclear force is the most powerful of the four forces. It binds quarks together into protons and neutrons through the exchange of particles called gluons, and it holds protons and neutrons together inside atomic nuclei. Without it, atomic nuclei would fly apart — the positive charges of the protons would repel each other and chemistry as we know it would be impossible. The strong force acts only over extremely short distances, roughly 10⁻¹⁵ meters — the size of a proton — and this short range is why its immense strength is not obvious at everyday scales.

The weak nuclear force mediates radioactive beta decay, the process by which a neutron in an unstable nucleus converts to a proton (or vice versa), emitting an electron and an antineutrino. It acts on quarks and leptons and is mediated by the W and Z bosons — massive carrier particles whose mass limits the force's range to even shorter distances than the strong force. The weak force is responsible for nuclear transmutation, which plays a critical role in stellar nucleosynthesis and in the fusion chain that powers stars including the Sun.

Toward Unification

A profound achievement of 20th century physics was the demonstration that electromagnetism and the weak force are actually aspects of a single unified electroweak force, described by a theory developed by Sheldon Glashow, Abdus Salam, and Steven Weinberg and confirmed by experiments at CERN in the 1980s. At the high energies of the early universe — above about 100 gigaelectronvolts — the distinction between electromagnetic and weak interactions disappears. The further unification of the electroweak force with the strong force (the Grand Unified Theory) and ultimately with gravity (the Theory of Everything) remains the central aspiration of theoretical physics and has not yet been achieved.

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FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

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