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hadron
[ had-ron ]
noun
- any elementary particle that is subject to the strong interaction. Hadrons are subdivided into baryons and mesons.
hadron
/ ˈhædrɒn /
noun
- any elementary particle capable of taking part in a strong nuclear interaction and therefore excluding leptons and photons
hadron
/ hăd′rŏn′ /
- Any of a class of subatomic particles composed of a combination of two or more quarks or antiquarks. Quarks (and antiquarks) of different colors are held together in hadrons by the strong nuclear force. Hadrons include both baryons (composed of three quarks or three antiquarks) and mesons (composed of a quark and an antiquark). The combination of quark colors in a hadron must be neutral, for example, red and antired (as in a pion) or red, blue, and green (as in a proton).
- Compare baryon
Derived Forms
- hadˈronic, adjective
Other Words From
- ha·dron·ic [ha-, dron, -ik], adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of hadron1
Example Sentences
In contrast, an electron-positron collision consumes the colliding particles’ full energy and produces no extraneous sprays, so physicists often use an e+e- collider to scrutinize the new particles discovered at a hadron collider.
So why do they need an even larger hadron collider?
Although it’s relatively straightforward to compute the influence of virtual photons, muons are also affected by a class of particles called hadrons—clumps of quarks bound together by gluons.
Lambda particles are baryons, which means they’re a type of hadron made of three quarks: one up quark, one down quark and one strange quark.
Most exotic hadrons, which are subatomic particles, are made up of two or three elemental particles known as quarks.
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