Hang on - just because K and K came up with this model don't assume it's the only way. K-K theory is not widely accepted in fact.
Totally understood. I wish I had asked "What were K and K's motives for insisting on this 1-to-1 force-to-dimension correspondence?" or "What are the motives of K-K theorists for insisitng...?"
"Why is gravity so 'weak' compared to the other fundamental forces?" In essence, extra dimensions are places to preserve or break symmetries, or have gravity "leak" into them.
Gotcha. I've heard that the strength of gravity is dwarfed by the strength of the nuclear forces, but is the same true about the EM force? In fact, somebody please correct the following statements if they are wrong and please tell me what I should replace the variables
X and
Y with.
1) Gravity is the
weakest force, but its range is
enormous. It's determined by
mass, which is something that
all 6 types of
individual quarks possess, and something that
both types of quark
pairings; i.e., protons and neutrons, possess.
2) The EM force is the
2nd weakest, and its range is also
enormous. It's determined by
charge, which is something that
not all 6 types of
individual quarks possess; i.e., only 1 type: electrons, and something that
not both types of quark
pairings; i.e., only 1 type: protons, possess.
3) The weak nuclear force is the
2nd strongest, but its range is
tiny. It's determined by
X, which is something that
no type of
individual quark possesses, but something that
both types of quark
pairings; i.e., protons and neutrons, possess.
4) The strong nuclear force is the
strongest, but its range is also
tiny. It's determined by
Y, which is something that
all 6 types of
individual quarks possess, but something that
no type of quark
pairing possesses.