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Encyclopedia > Subatomic particles
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Helium atom (not to scale)
Showing two protons (red), two neutrons (green) and a probability cloud (gray) of two electrons (yellow).

In physics, a subatomic particle is a particle smaller than an atom. These include atomic constituents such as electrons, protons, and neutrons (protons and neutrons are actually composite particles, made up of quarks), as well as particles produced by radiative and scattering processes, such as photons, neutrinos, and muons. Many of the particles that have been discovered and studied are actually not encountered naturally; they have to be produced during scattering processes in particle accelerators. The study of subatomic particles is the most active branch of particle physics.


The electron (symbol e-) is present in all atoms; it has 1/1836 the mass of a hydrogen atom, and a negative charge. Protons (symbol p+) are also present in all atoms; a proton is about the same mass as a hydrogen atom and carries positive charge equal in magnitude but opposite in sign to electron. Neutrons (symbol n) are electrically neutral and have slightly greater mass than protons.


Hadrons are particles composed of quarks. Examples include baryons and mesons. Baryons are composed of three quarks. They all have a large rest mass for subatomic particles. Examples of baryons are protons and neutrons. Every baryon has an antiparticle composed of three antiquarks.

Contents

Types of baryons (selection)

Name Quarks Mass (GeV)
Proton uud 0.938
Neutron udd 0.940
Λ uds 1.116
Σ + uus 1.189
Σ0 uds 1.192
Σ - dds 1.197
Δ + + uuu 1.232
Ω - sss 1.672
udc 2.273

Mesons are composed of a normal quark and an antiquark, which gives them baryon number zero. There are no stable mesons; the most stable have half lives on the order of nanoseconds. They have a rest mass starting with 140 MeV for the lightest mesons, the pion. Furthermore, the pion can be positively, negatively, or neutrally charged.+


Leptons are not composed of quarks, but are irreducible particles (no smaller constituent is currently known). Types of leptons include electrons, muons, tauons and neutrinos. Until recently neutrinos were thought to have zero rest mass; their masses are much smaller than the masses of any other subatomic particles.


See also

External links

References

  • particleadventure.org: The Standard Model (http://particleadventure.org/particleadventure/frameless/standard_model.html)
  • particleadventure.org: Particle chart (http://particleadventure.org/particleadventure/frameless/chart.html)
  • University of California: Particle Data Group (http://pdg.lbl.gov/)
  • Annotated Physics Encyclopędia: Quantum Field Theory (http://web.mit.edu/redingtn/www/netadv/qft.html)
  • Jose Galvez: Chapter 1 Electrodynamics (pdf) (http://jgalvez.home.cern.ch/jgalvez/School/pdf/LM-WeakIteractions.pdf)

Recent News


  Results from FactBites:
 
Quantum Computing + eHealth (722 words)
It has been proven that a subatomic particle can have different states simultaneously because when the particle momentum (mass and velocity) is measured, the particle changes.
For one observer, the probability of the particle momentum could be state for that observer.
That is why one subatomic particle can have different states -and probabilities, at the same time.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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