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strong force
noun
- Also called nuclear force. the short-range attractive force between baryons that holds together the nucleus of the atom.
- Also called color force. the force between quarks.
strong force
/ strông /
- The fundamental force that mediates interactions between particles with color charge , such as quarks and gluons. The strong force binds quarks together to form baryons such as protons and neutrons, maintains the binding of protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei, and is responsible for many particle decay processes. Particles that interact through the strong force exchange gluons, much as particles involved in electromagnetic interactions exchange photons. Quark color, but not flavor, is changed by the exchange of gluons. The strong force is stronger than the weak force, the electromagnetic force, and gravity, but has been known to apply only across distances the size of atomic nuclei or smaller.
- Also called color force strong interaction, strong nuclear force
strong force
- In physics , the force that holds particles together in the atomic nucleus and the force that holds quarks together in elementary particles .
Notes
Word History and Origins
Origin of strong force1
Example Sentences
One is the mysterious but powerful strong force.
Instead, neutrons are held together inside an atom's nucleus solely by something called the strong force, one of the four fundamental forces of nature.
The electromagnetic force is conveyed by the photon, the strong force by the gluon, and the weak force by particles called the W boson and Z boson.
Although girl power is a strong force in the film, Cockayne said that in reality "women wouldn't have had the power to put together a plan in the way they do in the film".
The research has now revealed, for the first time, a snapshot of the distribution of the strong force inside the proton.
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