(Physics) a particle that is less complex than an atom; regarded as constituents of all matter.
1Elektr0nika was also impatient for Cern to locate the fundamental particle that confers mass on to everything else: Come on, Higgs-Boson.
2It's a lot like a regular quark, only heavier, meaning it's composed of an even more fundamental particle the standard model doesn't account for.
3An anomaly in the tiny magnetic field of a fundamental particle could be the loose thread that lets us unravel a new layer of physics.
4The teleportation effect is limited to quantum-scale objects, such as fundamental particles.
5It describes 12 fundamental particles, governed by four basic forces.
6At this scale, the masses of fundamental particles originate.
7By detecting this light precisely, researchers hope to better understand the behavior of these fundamental particles.
8Muons are fundamental particles very like electrons, but with a mass more than 200 times greater.
9It is proposed that the Higgs field interacts with the fundamental particles, thereby giving them mass.
10Gell-Mann's theory was that all hadrons were made up of still smaller, even more fundamental particles.
11Electrons, which orbit atomic nuclei and give atoms their distinctive characters, are also considered fundamental particles.
12Before string theory, each of the fundamental particles was thought to occupy a single point of space.
13The theory describes an invisible field that pervades all of space and endows fundamental particles with mass.
14Protons are fundamental particles found inside the atomic nucleus and can be focused much more accurately than X-rays.
15He said the Higgs mechanism was only one solution to the question of how fundamental particles get their mass.
16After the war, Heisenberg worked on a unified theory of fundamental particles and on plasma physics and thermonuclear processes.
Aquesta col·locació està formada per:
Translations for fundamental particle