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baryon
[ bar-ee-on ]
noun
- a proton, neutron, or any elementary particle that decays into a set of particles that includes a proton.
baryon
/ ˈbærɪˌɒn /
noun
- any of a class of elementary particles that have a mass greater than or equal to that of the proton, participate in strong interactions, and have a spin of 1 2 . Baryons are either nucleons or hyperons. The baryon number is the number of baryons in a system minus the number of antibaryons
baryon
/ băr′ē-ŏn′ /
- Any of a family of subatomic particles composed of three quarks or three antiquarks. They are generally more massive than mesons, and interact with each other via the strong force. Baryons form a subclass of hadrons and are subdivided into nucleons and hyperons. Protons and neutrons are baryons.
- See Table at subatomic particle
Other Words From
- bar·y·on·ic [bar-ee-, on, -ik], adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of baryon1
Example Sentences
Among those particles were hydrogen and helium nuclei, collectively called baryons.
Sound waves reverberated through the gas like ripples in a pond, causing baryons to clump together, forming the seeds of future galaxies and clusters of galaxies.
BAO stands for “baryon acoustic oscillation,” a sort of frozen sound wave created by processes near the dawn of time.
It is believed to be a baryon acoustic oscillation, a pressure wave frozen in time from the beginning of the cosmos and then stretched out to galactic scales by the universe’s expansion.
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.
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