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This chapter is divided into two parts. The first part introduces the quark model, following more or less the historical developments. It led to an approximate symmetry, based on the SU(3) flavour group, where u, d and s quarks are the three degrees of freedom. The second part introduces the quantum chromodynamics theory (QCD), i.e. the true formal gauge theory of the strong interaction. Here again, the symmetry group is SU(3), but the degrees of freedom are the three quark colours. This symmetry is assumed to be exact, which has consequences on the existence of gluons and their properties, the carriers of the strong interaction at the elementary particle level, briefly mentioned in the previous chapter. The QCD interaction is the first non-Abelian interaction encountered in the book. The non-perturbative regime of QCD is also presented with a short introduction to lattice QCD. A discussion about the colour confinement and the hadronisation of quarks is also given.
Atoms were at the center of physicists’ interests in the 1920s. It was largely from the effort to understand atomic properties that modern quantum mechanics emerged in this decade. In the 1930s physicists’ concerns expanded to include the nature of atomic nuclei. The constituents of the nucleus were identified, and a start was made in learning what held them together. And as everyone knows, world history was changed in subsequent decades by the military application of nuclear physics.
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