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Gravity, Electromagnetic, and Nuclear (which is broken into weak nuclear and strong nuclear forces) are the three fundamental natural forces.
gravitational force is weakest force among the fundamental forces in nature per unit mass.
The four fundamental forces of nature are the strong and weak nuclear forces, electromagnetism, and gravity.
The four fundamental forces of nature are Weak nuclear force, Strong nuclear force, Electromagnetic force and Gravitational force.
A physicist.
physicist(:
Gravity, Electromagnetic, and Nuclear (which is broken into weak nuclear and strong nuclear forces) are the three fundamental natural forces.
gravitational force is weakest force among the fundamental forces in nature per unit mass.
The four fundamental forces of nature are the strong and weak nuclear forces, electromagnetism, and gravity.
The four fundamental forces of nature are Weak nuclear force, Strong nuclear force, Electromagnetic force and Gravitational force.
newton
There are four fundamental forces in nature, the strong, electromagnetic, the weak and gravitational. All forces between particles can be traced back to these.
Which of the four fundamental forces of nature is responsible for binding quarks to one another?
A physicist.
meteorologist
the strong force
One of the major goals of modern physics is to unify the 4 fundamental forces of nature into one Grand Unified Theory.A GUT would be a single, or maybe a handful, of mathematical equations capable of describing the interactions of the electromagnetic, strong nuclear, and weak nuclear forces, and also the force of gravity.Such "unification's" have been done in the past, meaning that at one point in time, there were more than 4 fundamental forces. In the 1800's, through the extensive research of several different scientists, a series of equations, known as Maxwell's Equations, were developed that completely explained the interactions of electricity and magnetism and also showed that light is a form of electromagnetic energy.Recently, scientists have successfully "unified" 2 of the 4 fundamental forces: electromagnetism and weak interaction, into the electroweak interaction.So to answer your question: there is no way to measure the number of forces in our universe. When someone tells you that there are 4 fundamental forces of nature, they are only partly telling you the truth. It would be much more correct for them to say that so far science has discovered 4 distinct, seemingly unrelated relationships among the interactions of matter in our universe.