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subatomic particle
(redirected from Sub-atomic particles)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

subatomic particle

 or elementary particle

Any of various self-contained units of matter or energy. Discovery of the electron in 1897 and of the atomic nucleus in 1911 established that the atom is actually a composite of a cloud of electrons surrounding a tiny but heavy core. By the early 1930s it was found that the nucleus is composed of even smaller particles, called protons and neutrons. In the early 1970s it was discovered that these particles are made up of several types of even more basic units, named quarks, which, together with several types of leptons, constitute the fundamental building blocks of all matter. A third major group of subatomic particles consists of bosons, which transmit the forces of the universe. More than 200 subatomic particles have been detected so far, and most appear to have a corresponding antiparticle (see antimatter).


subatomic particle [¦səb·ə′täm·ik ′pärd·ə·kəl]
(physics)
A particle which is smaller than an atom, namely, an elementary particle or an atomic nucleus.


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Scientists hope sub-atomic particles flung around the 27km of tunnel will collide at close to the speed of light.
The LHC is designed to collide sub-atomic particles together at energies never before attained.
It is designed to simulate the "Big Bang", which started the universe 15 billion years ago, by smashing sub-atomic particles together at energies never before achieved.
 
 
 
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