Is the strong/weak force infinite like electromagnetism

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Electromagnetic forces extend infinitely but diminish with distance, while the strong and weak forces are characterized as short-range. The weak force, mediated by W and Z bosons, has a limited range due to the mass of these particles, which results in an exponential decrease in strength. The range of these forces can be calculated using the Compton wavelength formula, indicating that they do not extend infinitely. Specifically, the weak force's effective range is approximately 0.0025 f, or about 2.5 x 10-16 cm. Thus, unlike electromagnetism, the strong and weak forces do not operate over infinite distances.
Jarfi
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Electromagnetic forces go infinetly far but decrease dramatically by distance. I was wondering is the strong and weak force are Only within a certain zone with a radius or do they stretch infinetly far.

On wiki it says they have short range but it doesn't say if it ever stops completely.
 
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Jarfi, Electromagnetism and gravity are the two long-range forces. This is related to the fact that the particles that transmit their effects have mass zero. The weak force is a short-range force, which means it falls off exponentially. It is transmitted by a pair of particles, the W boson with mass around 80 GeV and the Z boson with mass 90 GeV. The range of a short-range force is related to the Compton wavelength of its particle, and can be directly calculated from the mass. All you have to do is divide the constant hc by the mass, where hc = 197.5 MeV-f. (A fermi 'f' is a unit of length, 10-13 cm and is roughly the size of an atomic nucleus.) So for the W boson we have 197.5 MeV-f/80 GeV, or about 0.0025 f. (Or about 2.5 x 10-16 cm.) Pretty small.
 
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