only two long-range forces.
Of these, the electromagnetic force cancels itself out (with slight and temporary local exceptions) because both an attraction and a repulsion exist.
This leaves gravitational force alone in the field.
What's more, the most conspicuous bodies in the uni verse happen to be conglomerations of vast mass, and we live on the surface of one of these conglomerations.
Even so, there are hints that give away the real weak ness of gravitational force. Your weak muscle can lift a fifty-pound weight with the whole mass of the earth pull ing, gravitationally, in the other direction. A to magnet will lift a pin against the entire counterpufl of the earth.
Oh, gravity is weak all right. But let's see if we can dramatize that weakness further.
Suppose that the Earth were an assemblage of nothing but its mass in positrons, while the Sun were an assem blage of nothing but its mass in electrons. The force of at traction between them would be vastly greater than the feeble gravitational force that holds them together now.
In fact, in order to reduce the electromagnetic attraction to no more than the present gravitational one, the Earth and Sun would have to be separated by some 33,000,000,000, 000,000 light-years, or about five million times the diame ter of the known universe.
Or suppose you imagined in the place of the Sun a mil 108 lion tons of electrons (equal to the mass of a very small asteroid). And in the place of the Earth, imagine 31/3 tons of positrons.
The electromagnetic attraction between these two in significant masses, separated by the distance from the Earth to the Sun, would be equal to the gravitational at traction between the colossal masses of those two bodies right now.
In fact, if one could scatter a million tons of electrons on the Sun, and 31/3 tons of positrons on the Earth, you would double the Sun's attraction for the Earth and alter the nature of Earth's orbit considerably. And if you made it electrons, both on Sun and Earth, so as to introduce a repulsion, you would cancel the gravitational attraction al together and send old Earth on its way out of the Solar System.
Of course, all this is just paper calculation. The mere fact that electromagnetic forces are as strong as they are means that you cannot collect a significant number of like charged particles in one place. They would repel each other too strongly.
Suppose you divided the Sun into marble-sized fragments and strewed them through the Solar System at mutual rest.
Could you, by some manmade device, keep those fragments from falling together under the pull of gravity? Well, this is no greater a task than that of getting bold of a million tons of electrons and squeezing them together into a ball.
The same would hold true if you tried to separate a sizable quantity of positive charge from a sizable quantity of negative charge.
If the universe were composed of electrons and posi trons as the chief charged particles, the electromagnetic force would make it necessary for them to come together.
Since they are anti-particles, one being the precise reverse of the other, they would melt together, cancel each other, and go up in one cosmic flare of gamma rays.
Fortunately, the universe is composed of electrons and protons as the chief charged particles. Tbough their charges are exact opposites (-I for the former and +1 for the latter), this is not so of other properties-such as mass, for instance. Electrons and protons are not antiparticles, in other words, and cannot cancel each other.
Their opposite charges, however, set up a strong mutual attraction that cannot, within limits, be gainsaid. An elec tron and ia proton therefore approach closely and then maintain themselves at a wary distance, forming the hy drogen atom.
Individual protons can cling together despite electro magnetic repulsion because of the existence of a very short-range nuclear strong interaction force that sets up an attraction between neighboring protons that far over balances the electromagnetic repulsion. This makes atoms other than hydrogen possible.
In short: nuclear forces dominate the atomic nucleus; electromagnetic forces dominate the atom itself; and grav itational forces dominate the large astronomic bodies.
The weakness of the gravitational force is a source of frustration to physicists.
The different forces, you see, make themselves felt by transfers of particles. The nuclear strong interaction force, the strongest of all, makes itself evident by transfers of pions (pi-mesons), while the electromagnetic force (next strongest) does it by the transfer of photons. An analogous particle involved in weak