A visual narration of the story that Chanda Prescod-Weinstein tells about falling in love with the Standard Model of Particle Physics (and somewhat out of it) in her book The Disordered Cosmos.
The thumbnail is a diagram of "quantum chromodynamics", that attributes color as analogy for physical properties that are not actually about color. Prescod-Weinstein writes:
“I love the idea of QCD, but the language is a hot mess... But what’s important here is that color physics seems intuitive to physicists not because it’s a great analogy for general audiences but because our educations socialize us into the “color + color + color = white” paradigm. It would be great if I never had to read the phrase “colored degrees of freedom” in a new scientific paper again”.
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein starts The Disordered Cosmos by appealing to the neatly ordered story of the Standard Model of Particle Physics that deepened her attachment to physics. This attraction also produced internal tensions as she learned about the (white, male) history of quantum mechanics:
"I learned that I particularly enjoy a neatly ordered tale of an organized universe that can come off like a delicately constructed sum of its parts.. The way I have inhaled particle physics enmeshes me with this historical trajectory. But I am still also one natural conclusion of a Black child dreaming of quarks—not because quarks could serve state interests, but because quarks nourished the soul. The Standard Model? It is how I fell in love for the first time.”