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From my recent experience teaching high school students I've found that they are taught that the strong force between nucleons is mediated by virtual-pion exchange, whereas between quarks it's gluons. They are not, however, taught anything about colour or quark-confinement.

At a more sophisticated level of physics, is it just that the maths works equally well for either type of boson, or is one (type of boson) in fact more correct than the other?

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    $\begingroup$ See the answer by Lubos at physics.stackexchange.com/q/9661 . The correct type is the gluon. $\endgroup$
    – anna v
    Commented May 10, 2011 at 12:04
  • $\begingroup$ @anna I posed this question after having read @Lubosh's answer. I don't feel that it answers my question and, either way, I was kind of hoping for a slightly more expansive answer. When I get a chance I'll add an edit, containing some LaTex, that should better describe why I posted this query. $\endgroup$
    – qftme
    Commented May 10, 2011 at 12:08
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    $\begingroup$ Lubos gave a complete answer, but one could add that nuclear forces are in analogy with the electromagnetic forces between molecules, the Van der Waals forces. There the mediator is the photon, but the moments of the charge distributions are what control the forces exerted between molecules. In a similar way the strong nuclear forces are such a spillover, except that in contrast to the photon the gluon carries color and couples to itself so it is much more complicated. $\endgroup$
    – anna v
    Commented May 10, 2011 at 13:42
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    $\begingroup$ Yes. Depending on the energy and distance scale in question. $\endgroup$ Commented May 10, 2011 at 14:18
  • $\begingroup$ @annav It looks to me like lubos's answer only talks about forces within nicleons, not between them. $\endgroup$
    – Spencer
    Commented Jun 27, 2021 at 21:09

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Dear qftme, I agree that your question deserves a more expansive answer. The answer, "pions" or "gluons", depends on the accuracy with which you want to describe the strong force.

Historically, people didn't know about quarks and gluons in the 1930s when they began to study the forces in the nuclei for the first time.

In 1935, Hideki Yukawa made the most important early contribution of Japanese science to physics when he proposed that there may be short-range forces otherwise analogous to long-range electromagnetism whose potential is $$V(r) = K\frac{e^{-\mu r}}{r} $$ The Fourier transform of this potential is simply $1/(p^2+\mu^2)$ which is natural - an inverted propagator of a massless particle. (The exponential was added relatively to the Coulomb potential; and in the Fourier transform, it's equivalent to the addition of $\mu^2$ in the denominator.) The Yukawa particle (a spinless boson) was mediating a force between particles that was only significantly nonzero for short enough distances. The description agreed with the application to protons, neutrons, and the forces among them.

So the mediator of the strong force was thought to be a pion and the model worked pretty well. (In the 1930s, people were also confusing muons and pions in the cosmic rays, using names that sound bizarre to the contemporary physicists' ears - such as a mesotron, a hybrid of pion and muon, but that's another story.)

The pion model was viable even when the nuclear interactions were understood much more quantitatively in the 1960s. The pions are "pseudo-Goldstone bosons". They're spinless (nearly) massless bosons whose existence is guaranteed by the existence of a broken symmetry - in this case, it was the $SU(3)$ symmetry rotating the three flavors we currently know as flavors of the $u,d,s$ light quarks. The symmetry is approximate which is why the pseudo-Goldstone bosons, the pions (and kaons), are not exactly massless. But they're still significantly lighter than the protons and neutrons.

However, the theory with the fundamental pion fields is not renormalizable - it boils down to the Lagrangian's being highly nonlinear and complicated. It inevitably produces absurd predictions at short enough distances or high enough energies - distances that are shorter than the proton radius.

A better theory was needed. Finally, it was found in Quantum Chromodynamics that explains all protons, neutrons, and even pions and kaons (and hundreds of others) as bound states of quarks (and gluons and antiquarks). In that theory, all the hadrons are described as complicated composite particles and all the forces ultimately boil down to the QCD Lagrangian where the force is due to the gluons.

So whenever you study the physics at high enough energy or resolution so that you see "inside" the protons and you see the quarks, you must obviously use gluons as the messengers. Pions as messengers are only good in approximate theories in which the energies are much smaller than the proton mass. This condition also pretty much means that the velocities of the hadrons have to be much smaller than the speed of light.

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  • $\begingroup$ So shouldnt it be possible to derive the pion model.as a low energy approximation of QCD? Do you know of a paper doing that? $\endgroup$
    – lalala
    Commented May 30, 2017 at 19:47
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    $\begingroup$ I think that the statement that "the pion model is an approximation of QCD" is valid morally but not in any systematic, exact sense. There is no meaningful limit in which the pions would describe all the degrees of freedom etc. So there isn't and there can't be any rigorous derivation as far as I can say. All such argumentation has to be incomplete, heuristic etc. $\endgroup$ Commented May 31, 2017 at 5:56
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    $\begingroup$ I just want to add that this is what renormalization is in principle. The resolution of your model depends on how high order of interactions you include. $\endgroup$
    – Liam Clink
    Commented Dec 7, 2018 at 18:18
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These are some nice answers!

Wanted to add that, as you know, how strongly the quarks couple to each other (or interact with each other) is momentum-dependent. So within the nucleons (protons and neutrons) quark coupling is very strong (which is why the quarks are confined in the nucleons).

Because the interquark interaction is so strong at these energies, it is impossible to treat it perturbatively (that is, in terms of gluon-exchange). This is why, in the regime of nucleons, we talk instead about meson exchange like pion exchange (work by Witten and Weinberg), not gluon exchange.

In summary: QCD has momentum-dependent coupling. So at low energies it is impossible to treat it perturbatively (as quarks exchanging gluons). We change our view to treating it as baryons (like nucleons) exchanging mesons.

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gluons mediate the strong force between quarks. Pions mediate the nuclear force or nucleon-nucleon interaction or RESIDUAL strong force. So, the answer to your question is BOTH. In different measure, but both. See Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_force

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If you look at the standard model you will only find gluons. This is very clear and should settle any doubts. (Pions are a historical relic of the middle of the twentieth century which only provide an approximation.)

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    $\begingroup$ This answer misses all the subtlety of the question. Nuclear physics is still done using effective models explicitly including meson exchange based models. It's not a historic relic but a regime of interest just like every other effective theory. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 30, 2015 at 17:59
  • $\begingroup$ Yeah gluons are only the mediators of strong force between quarks "inside" protons or neutrons. Pions are actually the mediators between protons and neutrons. It may be that they may have their origin in a gluon, sure. But it is the pions that mediate the strong force. $\endgroup$ Commented May 18, 2020 at 14:26

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