Tag Archives: quarks
‘Weak charge’ measurement holds up SM prediction
Various dark matter detectors around the world, massive particle accelerators and colliders, powerful telescopes on the ground and in space all have their distinct agendas but ultimately what unites them is humankind’s quest to understand what the hell this universe … Continue reading
Posted in Science
Tagged elastic scattering, electrons, gluons, parity violation, protons, quarks, Qweak experiment, spin polarisation, Standard Model of particle physics, weak charge, weak nuclear force
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Chromodynamics: Gluons are just gonzo
One of the more fascinating bits of high-energy physics is the branch of physics called quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Don’t let the big name throw you off: it deals with a bunch of elementary particles that have a property called colour … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Electromagnetism, gluons, Hunter S. Thompson, Large Hadron Collider, particle physics, quantum chromodynamics, quarks, Richard Feynman, strong nuclear force
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