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Is there an answer to the question why there are only four fundamental interactions of nature?

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    $\begingroup$ A question that's at least as interesting: why do we need so many fundamental interactions? $\endgroup$ Commented May 23, 2018 at 11:24
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    $\begingroup$ There are likely more than 4: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supersymmetry en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_and_Y_bosons en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axion $\endgroup$ Commented May 23, 2018 at 11:28
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    $\begingroup$ The "number of fundamental forces" tends to vary, as we sometimes discover more forces and sometimes discover that what we thought were different forces are really aspects of a single force. For example, there was a time when the strong nuclear force was unknown and when electricity and magnetism were considered separate forces. I wouldn't be surprised to see more discoveries of both sorts in the future. (Nor would I be surprised if future physics casts doubt on the very notion of "fundamental force".) $\endgroup$ Commented May 23, 2018 at 14:53
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    $\begingroup$ Answering as a comment because it is trivial, but there are at least four fundamental forces because we can't explain everything with three or less forces. $\endgroup$
    – ohwilleke
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 19:23
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    $\begingroup$ Obvious. Because there are only four elements. $\endgroup$
    – Magoo
    Commented May 26, 2018 at 13:43

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The answer "because we do not need more" by @rubenvb is fine.

Studying physics, you must realize that physics is not answering fundamental "why" questions. Physics uses mathematical tools to model measurements and these models have to fit new data, i.e. be predictive. As long as the models are not falsified, they are considered valid and useful. Once falsified, modifications or even drastic new models are sought. A prime example, quantum mechanics, when classical mechanics was invalidated: black body radiation, photoelectric effect and atomic spectra falsified efforts of classical modelling.

Physics using the appropriate models show "how" one goes from data to predictions for new experimental data. Looking for "why" in the models, one goes up or down the mathematics and arrives at the answer "because that is what has been measured"

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    $\begingroup$ @Chair Unification theories are mathematical models which try to derive the four forces observed in experiments from a theoretical one force at some boundary conditions, i.e. very high energies. The unification of electricity and magnetism with maxwell equations was the simplest, then the electroweak has had successes, eg the discovery of the Higgs. The others are good guesses for modeling high energy behavior that will be consistent with low energy measurements too. In a sense a mathematical model of matematcal models of data. $\endgroup$
    – anna v
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 17:35
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    $\begingroup$ I disagree; physics is about answering fundamental why questions. The scientific process serves as a platform for testing hypotheses, but also about answering "why" questions stemming from those you listed - understanding the nature of light in a fundamental form, why atoms form the most prevalent material in our part of the universe, and so on. It's analogous to building a wonder like the Great Pyramid; clever tools are crucial, but the aim is ultimately much deeper. There is an absolute number of 'fundamental forces' that emerge at our energy scale, even if we do not currently know each one. $\endgroup$
    – Alekxos
    Commented May 25, 2018 at 1:38
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    $\begingroup$ @Alekxos Your view is the view of a platonist, not of an experimental physicist, which all physicists should be, imo. It is metaphysics and philosophy to use beliefs to model reality : that mathematics models reality we only need to discover the correct mathematics ( like God). $\endgroup$
    – anna v
    Commented May 25, 2018 at 3:47
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    $\begingroup$ @annav I prefer the term realist, or theoretical physicist. :) If there is not an absolute reality then what is there? It is up to us to find clever ways of discerning which possible formulations can be true and which cannot. $\endgroup$
    – Alekxos
    Commented May 25, 2018 at 5:30
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    $\begingroup$ This is exactly the reason I ended up changing my major away from physics in undergrad. That revelation that physics (and indeed, science in general) answers how instead of why was just too much of a shock and a leap of faith... so I wimped out and chose engineering instead (no why, only how). $\endgroup$
    – tonysdg
    Commented May 25, 2018 at 23:00
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Because we don't need more.

Well, we haven't found any evidence of any others. And until then, there's no need. Granted, some experiments might show indication of something else going on that pushes revision of the Standard Model.

On the mathematical side, this can be explained from symmetry: the Standard Model Lagrangian obeys a certain set of symmetry operations, which physicists assume to be valid. From this Lagrangian, using the Quantum Field Theory formalism, the separate "fundamental interactions" can be derived. From Wikipedia (emphasis mine):

The global Poincaré symmetry is postulated for all relativistic quantum field theories. It consists of the familiar translational symmetry, rotational symmetry and the inertial reference frame invariance central to the theory of special relativity. The local SU(3)×SU(2)×U(1) gauge symmetry is an internal symmetry that essentially defines the Standard Model. Roughly, the three factors of the gauge symmetry give rise to the three fundamental interactions. The fields fall into different representations of the various symmetry groups of the Standard Model (see table).

The three interactions mentioned here are slightly different categorizations of your four fundamental interactions, but essentially the same (except maybe the Brout-Englert-Higgs part). The fourth, gravitation, is assumed to be somewhat related to the Higgs part of the Standard Model, and doesn't yet quite fit in the rest of the Standard Model.

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    $\begingroup$ Why we don't have 10 different forces of nature? What is so special about four? Are we sure we won't discover more in future? $\endgroup$ Commented May 23, 2018 at 9:54
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    $\begingroup$ Of course we're not sure we might discover more. Essentially, we had more to begin with (the electric and magnetic forces were unified, which means nothing more than that they were mathematically seen to be described by one more complete equation). So yes, nothing in physics is fixed (except maybe the local speed of light in vacuum in locally flat and static space-time). $\endgroup$
    – rubenvb
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 9:59
  • $\begingroup$ If we're equating the forces to the components of local gauge symmetry, are there fundamental limits to the local gauge symmetry? For example, could it "actually" be SU(4)×SU(3)×SU(2)×U(1) or E(3)×SU(3)×SU(2)×U(1) with the "extra" symmetry corresponding to some additional fundamental force, or are potential "additional" symmetries limited in some fashion (in type, number, properties, etc.)? $\endgroup$
    – R.M.
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 18:44
  • $\begingroup$ @R.M. As far as I understand (which admittedly isn't very far) this is all pretty much new physics. I read a pop-sci article some years back about research into the direction of higher order symmetry groups being explored as a basis of physical reality. But it was theoretical exploratory research as far as I could tell. "Let's assume this more complicated symmetry is valid, try to deduce the current Standard Model and see what else we can predict" sort of exploration. Kind of what string theory stuff has been trying to do for a long time by exploring more dimensions. $\endgroup$
    – rubenvb
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 18:52
  • $\begingroup$ Symmetry is just another starting point where strong assumptions are made to arrive at "current known physics". A very elegant one, and I like this train of thought a lot, and I personally hope it leads to some simplified formulation of "all of physics", so we can actually reformulate or throw away a lot of awfully complicated theory we have now. Something like choosing the correct basis set to solve an equation, but more like choosing the correct representation to arrive at some known formula. $\endgroup$
    – rubenvb
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 18:56
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I think it is wrong to say that "why" questions are beyond the purview of physics, or that there can never be an answer to this question. Very often physics can explain why something is true in terms of more fundamental principles. Sometimes the why of those more fundamental principles can be explained in terms of principles that are even more fundamental. But there is always a lowest currently understood layer, about which all one can say is "this is the model that fits our observations best."

For instance, when Kepler worked out his orbital laws they were just basic facts of nature. If you asked why they did that, the answer would be that "it is what has been measured," to quote anna v's answer.

But then Newton found a reason why Kepler's laws were true: The principle of universal gravitation. And now we can say that the inverse-square law of gravitational attraction is approximately true because of the way mass causes spacetime to curve. But at that point we must stop. We know of no deeper reason why mass should do that to spacetime. It is just what we observe.

This is the state of affairs with the four forces. The best models we have include them, and that is the only reason we can give now. But there is no guarantee that we will not discover some deeper theory that can explain the existence of four forces, rather than three or five, as a consequence of some more fundamental principle. But in some sense we would then be back where we started, because that principle would not have a reason why it is true.

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    $\begingroup$ Very true. "Why" questions ARE answered by physics. That is the reason people like physics! The only correct answer to the OP: we do not know yet - this might change soon, once we find a unified theory. All other answers given in this thread are wrong or at least misleading $\endgroup$
    – user85598
    Commented Jun 22, 2020 at 10:45
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Because that's the smallest number of laws we've been able to figure out to explain what we observe as well as possible.

Alternative: Physicists have been working for more than a century to reduce the number of fundamental laws, preferably to one, and so far, they've gotten it down to four.

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  • $\begingroup$ Wolfram Physics project has 1 force $\endgroup$
    – Max
    Commented Dec 2, 2020 at 10:55
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Is there an answer to the question why there are only four fundamental interactions of nature?

No, and there never will be one

We have no science at all which can answer any meaningful "why" question about the structure of the universe, especially not about why things we do not observe are missing.

The best we can come up with is to observe a bunch of features and figure out somewhat fitting mathematical/physical theories about how they might be interrelated. And we get that wrong all the time.

My word "meaningful" up there means going down to the "lowest turtle" when explaining something; i.e. not simply an answer which stems from theories we have which seem to fit our current understanding of nature.

For example: we know that nothing can go faster than c mainly because according to Einstein, it would take an infinite amount of energy to get something with mass even up to c, not to mention faster. But this is, in the sense of this answer, not an answer to the question of "why can nothing go faster than c?". I interpret that question as "Why is our universe structured in a way that you need infinite amounts of energy to get to c?".

In fact, on any given day someone might find an error in our theories and figure out a way to move faster than c, or do time travel, or find a 5th fundamental interaction. As we cannot even know anything about the universe with absolute, fundamental security, we can certainly not answer a "why" answer.

A very nice video about this: Richard Feynman. Why.

So I am not going to be able to give you an answer to "why magnets attract each other?" except to tell you that they do, and to tell you that that's one of the [...] different kinds of forces [...] [...and to give an explanation in more difficult terms...]

This is not exactly the same kind of thing we're talking about here, but should show the spirit when answering "why" questions.

Outlook

This is a fascinating topic, and you could do worse than checking out the antrophic principle and the moat of philosophical topics hidden behind that. This principle comes in two versions:

  • The strong antrophic principle basically says (my wording) that the universe was tuned "just so" to enable intelligent life (us!), i.e. with intent.
  • The weak version says "if the universe were not able to sustain life like ours, we would not be here to ask the question".

The strong version veers right into the direction of beliefs and religion, and while for many people it may be valid, it certainly is not really applicable here on Physics.SE (and while there may be believers amongst physicists, it certainly does not give us any new information).

The weak version is obviously true, and it leads to a bias about what features our universe must have. But it also does not answer any kind of deep, substantial "why" question.

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    $\begingroup$ I don't believe the "and there will never be one" answer can be known to be correct. One could, for example, come up with a "theory of everything" in which the answer is that there are four orthogonal actions possible in an SU(5)/Z(3) group or something like that. The number of extant fundamental forces of nature known to man has gone up and gone down many times in the history of physics. We know why there are the forces that used to be considered fundamental based upon deeper theories. $\endgroup$
    – ohwilleke
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 19:22
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    $\begingroup$ @ohwilleke, yes, the spirit of my answer says that even if we find that theory of everything, we still won't know "why" that theory works (compare the example about faster-than-light)... We know why there are the forces that used to be considered fundamental based upon deeper theories. that's not what OP is asking though, he is asking "why are there" (like, "why is the universe thus that ..."). At least that's the interpretation behind my answer. ;) $\endgroup$
    – AnoE
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 19:26
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    $\begingroup$ In that scenario we wouldn't know why there is a single TOE, but we would know why the four fundamental forces we know of today exist, and depending on the TOE, would could even state that "this TOE flows from X axioms" which appear to be true. One can argue that it is Turtles all the way down, but one could have a better answer to the immediate question we face today than we have today. $\endgroup$
    – ohwilleke
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 19:29
  • $\begingroup$ True enough, @ohwilleke, I'd add something according to those lines to the answer. $\endgroup$
    – AnoE
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 19:33
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    $\begingroup$ @arivero, the answer to the question is "no" (and the first word of my text), but stopping there would be an awfully bad StackExchange answer. :-) $\endgroup$
    – AnoE
    Commented May 26, 2018 at 6:45
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There's no reason to believe that there should only be four. Four is the highest number of fundamental interactions that we've seen so far, but there may be other, extremely weak* forces that we simply haven't observed yet. There are plenty of experimentalists working on looking for new macroscopic fundamental forces even today; in fact, as an undergrad I spent most of my research doing exactly that!

There's also plenty of reason to believe that there could be more than four fundamental forces. The main paper that we used to justify our particular brand of research derived 16 exchange potentials from nonrelativistic QFT, only one of which actually matched the familiar scalar $1/r$ potential common to gravity and electromagnetism (https://arxiv.org/pdf/hep-ph/0605342.pdf). There are many, many other papers that predict the existence of additional fundamental forces in different ways, so this is a fertile experimental research field.

*Well, either extremely weak, or otherwise occupying obscure corners of phase space (like a force that is strongest at scales of a micron, or one that requires a particular combination of spin polarization and translational velocity that is not often tested in experiment).

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  • $\begingroup$ Once I read that given that electro-weak is just one force you have forces with different level of particles: 1 Gravity. 2 Electro-weak (+ and -). 3 Strong (with 3 different colors). Could a 4th force exists? Is there a deeper reason for not existing? would it have a range too small to be observed? $\endgroup$
    – borjab
    Commented May 28, 2018 at 8:18
  • $\begingroup$ Dark matter seems to point to the necessity of additional forces.. $\endgroup$
    – CriglCragl
    Commented Jul 31, 2020 at 15:42
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    $\begingroup$ @CriglCragl Not necessarily. It depends on what you mean by a "force". For example, the axion field is a bosonic dark matter candidate that couples to fermions directly, and turns into photons via a fermion loop diagram in a strong magnetic field. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 31, 2020 at 17:28
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Taking a slightly different angle on the question the answer that "we don't need more" is definitely correct, but further, I would say we don't need more, and the less the better.

To answer why this is we need to know about a problem sometimes referred to as overfitting. The idea behind overfitting is this; say I design a predictive model, for example I wish to obtain a relationship between the qualities of oak sap and the age of an oak. I learn the ages of a 100 oaks from records of their planting and I measure the viscosity of their sap, the colour, the density, the water content, and 46 more observables. I start by just looking at the relationship between viscosity and age. Maybe using a quadratic model, with 3 parameters. It's quite a strong relationship, and I can get within about 20 years of the age of each tree using just the viscosity of the sap. But there are 49 more variables! So I construct a complex model for the age of a tree that predicts how the age should effect all 50 variables, and then I fit the 150 parameters of this model. By tuning the complex model I can predict the ages of all 100 trees to within a day, how wonderful. Then someone shows me another oak, they say "I know how old this oak is, let's use it to test your model". The simple, viscosity only, model an the complex model give very different answers. The simple model is much more accurate at predicting the age of the new tree. Why? Because the complex model was not really learning the ages of the 100 trees at all, it was learning to identify the 100 trees using noise in the data that was unrelated to their age, and then I had tuned it's parameters so that it would give me the correct weight for each tree. It wasn't possible to do this for the simple model, because there were not enough parameters available for me to tune, so the simple model was forced to find a genuine correlation if there was one to be found. The complex model is overfitting.

And so the more complexity there is in any model the greater it's tendency to overfit. When a model starts overfitting it loses predictive power. I am quite confident that someone with enough time an patience could derive a model that had 5 forces in it. They might even find a model that was more intuitive, or computationally easier to work with. But that more complex model would be less likely to fit new unseen results, because its complexity would be tuned to the results that we have seen, and so use the noise to identify the data and give us the answer we tried to fit. This noise is not something we wanted to fit, and a simpler model is less likely to have the capacity to fit noise in the first place.

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    $\begingroup$ I think your answer would greatly benefit from explaining what "overfitting" is and how does it differ from "fitting well". It doesn't seem immediately obvious that "when a model starts overfitting it loses predictive power", maybe you could formulate it in a more intuitive way? $\endgroup$
    – kubanczyk
    Commented May 28, 2018 at 9:45
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The search for a Unified Field Theory posits that there is one fundamental field. It is expected that all four forces will be unified at the Planck scale, which is many orders of magnitude outside current experimental reach, although gravitational observatories and cosmological models may provide insights.

Three of the four fundamental forces have been integrated with each other, and mass and special relativity, in quantum field theory (QFT). That only leaves gravity, which the leading attempts to unify are string theory and loop quantum gravity. It should be noted that this will have to involve dealing with the nature and emergence of time, which is not included in QFT.

The three linked fundamental forces have been shown to arise from three fundamental symmetries and their associated conservation principles, in time (energy), in space is translation and rotation (momentum), and internal symmetry (particle identity and quantum numbers). These considerations give rise to understanding particle-families as local gauge symmetry symmetry groups, that pair boson and virtual particle exchanges into what we call the fundamental forces or fields. We have the Higgs boson from which mass derives, but no evidence for the graviton expected to mediate it.

So, the fundamental forces are revealed as being related to the properties of our universe's topological properties. String theory posits a wider domain of possibilities for physical laws. We find that significant properties giving rise to complexity in our universe seem to be a result of fine tuning, and we live in a fine tuned universe which appears to violate assumptions we make about 'naturalness'. It seems inevitable that there is some kind of probability space in which these fundamental constants are different, which is typically called the multiverse, making the fine tuning problem one of locating our own universe within that.

The broad responses to these issues are, disputing the fine tuning (in particular as subjective anthropocentrism), criticism by lack of imagination (our inability to explore 11 dimensional topologies gives us very little idea of the other options), and the anthropic principle (many variants, including the simulation hypothesis).

I do not claim to be an expert in this, or even very knowledgeable. It only seemed to me this ground was not covered in other answers. From which I see, a high degree of skepticism and reluctance about these issues, despite them being self-evident results and open problems of modern physics. I would love anyone to correct me with references and where possible by disputing statements in my references.

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Physics (and science generally) aims to answer the question of "What rules does this seem to follow".

We are human,so we hope to get deeper insights, and questions like "why?" inspire us powerfully, and we do ask these questions a lot. But the hard science research focuses on observing and testing rules that things seem to follow, even if as humans we are guided by wider ideals, and we imbue their findings with deeper meaning.

So in physics we ask what rules the physical universe seems to follow; in biology we ask what physical rules living systems (including connected systems such as ecospheres) seem to follow, and so on.

To take an analogy, there is a child's game where one person picks out (say) specific cars on the road, and the other person has to ask questions to guess what rule is being used. It's a bit like that.

What this means is that the idea of 4 fundamental forces is not how the universe works. Well, it might be, but it probably isn't, and philosophically its different anyhow:

  • The universe might work on any or no principles, including ones we can't actually conceive, or ones we would consider irrational. If that's how it works then that's how it works and we are stuck with it. (Of course it may not, but the point is, if it did then we couldn't handwave it away)
  • We have limited knowledge (basically whatever we know, test, or find at this time) so we are limited by our toolbox as to what we can conclude. If our methods don't yet include the necessary tools, we can't get the right answers.
  • A model is not the same as reality. At best it says "This best approximates and predicts what is going on, and provides some logic for how it might be". But it's intimately tied to the observer, and it's never the reality itself.

So right now as of 2018 the best "what rules does it seem to follow" that we have come up with, has 4 forces in it. Tomorrow's best might have 5, or 15, or 1, or not have any notion of "fundamental forces" at all, and the day after's might be different again.

And that,really, is why we say there are 4 fundamental forces. Not because there are, but because our current best guess of "what rules does it seem to follow" is a set of rules based on a concept of quantum fields/interactions/forces and includes 4 of them. We test it hard in all kinds of ways, and it seems to really reflect the rules that the universe follows. Tomorrows new observations and new best guesses - who can tell?

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There are no theories which can predict the number of fundamental interactions in Nature, and they never will exist. Throughout time, Physics has been dominating the fields of larger energy scales. At ancient Greek times, or even probably before, natural philosophers realized about Gravity, Electricity and Magnetism, as their effects are noticeable at the energy scales we humans can have sensorial experiences. When trying to dig deeper into matter's structure (lower spatial scales=higher energy scales), physicists realized there were another two types of interactions that we cannot notice them by a daily experience as falling from the bicycle or rug with the coat or playing with magnets.

Maybe digging deeper we could find another type of interaction, maybe not, so the answer to this question is a bit redundant. I have seen other answers like "why we need more" etc. If we just stick to this idea, then we are being lazy minded and with an enormous lack of enthusiasm, as physics through years has been renewing itself according to our ways to approach the laws of Nature.

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  • $\begingroup$ You mean sensory, rather than censorial, right? 'Never will' seems an unjustifiably bold statement, which requires more context. $\endgroup$
    – CriglCragl
    Commented Jul 25, 2020 at 17:33
  • $\begingroup$ @CriglCragl yes, my fault ;-) $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 29, 2020 at 10:53

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