The Standard Model is a kind of periodic table of the elements for particle physics. But instead of listing the chemical elements, it lists the fundamental particles that make up the atoms that make up the chemical elements, along with any other particles that cannot be broken down into any smaller pieces.
The complete Standard Model took a long time to build. Physicist J.J. Thomson discovered the electron in 1897, and scientists at the Large Hadron Collider found the final piece of the puzzle, the Higgs boson, in 2012.
Use this interactive graphic to explore the different particles that make up the building blocks of our universe.
1968
2.3 MeV
First
SLAC
2/3
1/2
Up and down quarks make up protons and neutrons, which make up the nucleus of every atom.
1974
1.275 GeV
Second
Brookhaven & SLAC
2/3
1/2
In 1974, two independent research groups conducting experiments at two independent labs discovered the charm quark, the fourth quark to be found. The surprising discovery forced physicists to reconsider how the universe works at the smallest scale.
1995
173.21 GeV
Third
Fermilab
2/3
1/2
The top quark is the heaviest quark discovered so far. It has about the same weight as a gold atom. But unlike an atom, it is a fundamental, or elementary, particle; as far as we know, it is not made of smaller building blocks.
1968
4.8 MeV
First
SLAC
-1/3
1/2
Nobody knows why, but a down quark is a just a little bit heavier than an up quark. If that weren’t the case, the protons inside every atom would decay and the universe would look very different.
1947
95 MeV
Second
Manchester University
-1/3
1/2
A new class of particles with “strange” properties were discovered in the 1960s, many years before it became clear that those properties were due to the fact that the particles all contained a new, “strange” kind of quark.
1977
4.18 GeV
Third
Fermilab
-1/3
1/2
This particle is a heavier cousin of the down and strange quarks. Its discovery confirmed that all elementary building blocks of ordinary matter come in three different versions.
1897
0.511 MeV
First
Cavendish Laboratory
-1
1/2
The electron powers the world. It is the lightest particle with an electric charge and a building block of all atoms. The electron belongs to the family of charged leptons.
1937
105.66 MeV
Second
Caltech & Harvard
-1
1/2
The muon is a heavier version of the electron. It rains down on us as it is created in collisions of cosmic rays with the Earth’s atmosphere. When it was discovered in 1937, a physicist asked, “Who ordered that?”
1976
1776.82 MeV
Third
SLAC
-1
1/2
The discovery of this particle in 1976 completely surprised scientists. It was the first discovery of a particle of the so-called third generation. It is the third and heaviest of the charged leptons, heavier than both the electron and the muon.
1956
<2 eV
First
Savannah River Plant
0
1/2
Measurements and calculations in the 1920s led to the prediction of the existence of an elusive particle without electric charge, the neutrino. But it wasn’t until 1956 that scientists observed the signal of an electron neutrino interacting with other particles. Nuclear reactions in the sun and in nuclear power plants produce electron antineutrinos.
1962
<0.19 MeV
Second
Brookhaven
0
1/2
Neutrinos come in three flavors. The muon neutrino was first discovered in 1962. Neutrino beams from accelerators are typically made up of muon neutrinos and muon antineutrinos.
2000
<18.2 MeV
Third
Fermilab
0
1/2
Based on theoretical models and indirect observations, scientists expected to find a third generation of neutrino. But it took until 2000 for scientists to develop the technologies to identify the particle tracks created by tau neutrino interactions.
1923
<1x10^-18 eV
Washington University
0
1
The photon is the only elementary particle visible to the human eye—but only if it has the right energy and frequency (color). It transmits the electromagnetic force between charged particles.
1979
0
DESY
0
1
The gluon is the glue that holds together quarks to form protons, neutrons and other particles. It mediates the strong nuclear force.
1983
91.1876 GeV
CERN
0
1
The Z boson is the electrically neutral cousin of the W boson and a heavy relative of the photon. Together, these particles explain the electroweak force.
1983
80.385 GeV
CERN
±1
1
The W boson is the only force carrier that has an electric charge. It’s essential for weak nuclear reactions: Without it, the sun would not shine.
2012
125.7 GeV
CERN
0
0
Discovered in 2012, the Higgs boson was the last missing piece of the Standard Model puzzle. It is a different kind of force carrier from the other elementary forces, and it gives mass to quarks as well as the W and Z bosons. Whether it also gives mass to neutrinos remains to be discovered.