Quantum mechanical particle in nuclear, atomic, and particle physics; often subatomic; composed of elementary particle(s)
1The transformation had occurred between observations, like the state change in a quantum particle.
2Why a quantum particle is not like a water drop.
3Like a quantum particle or an M.C.
4What is a quantum particle?
5The one connection is the mysterious way that quantum particles actually move.
6Take Erwin Schrödinger's equation for calculating the probabilistic properties of quantum particles.
7Entanglement links quantum particles so that fiddling with one can instantly affect another.
8First, quantum particles such as electrons can exist in multiple states at once.
9Why do quantum particles sometimes behave like waves whereas footballs don't?
10Virtual quantum particles, in the middle of Feynman diagrams, don't have to have that mass.
11They all use photons, quantum particles of light, that run through a maze of crisscrossing optical channels.
12Because they are quantum particles, photons undergo quantum fluctuations, and these affect the interaction with the muons.
13The individual quantum particles become uniform.
14This idea that the darkest phenomenon in the universe actually is forced to radiate quantum particles is pretty wild.
15It's basically a wavelike mathematical expression, reflecting the well-known fact that quantum particles can sometimes seem to behave like waves.
16In other words, those nimble quantum particles ought to be able to keep their property of superposition before gravity grabs hold.
Translations for quantum particle