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Particle zoo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In particle physics, the term particle zoo[1][2] is used colloquially to describe the relatively extensive list of known subatomic particles by comparison to the variety of species in a zoo.

In the history of particle physics, the topic of particles was considered to be particularly confusing in the late 1960s. Before the discovery of quarks, hundreds of strongly interacting particles (hadrons) were known and believed to be distinct elementary particles. It was later discovered that they were not elementary particles, but rather composites of quarks. The set of particles believed today to be elementary is known as the Standard Model and includes quarks, bosons and leptons.

The term "subnuclear zoo" was coined or popularized by Robert Oppenheimer in 1956 at the VI Rochester International Conference on High Energy Physics.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Nuclear Technology. By Joseph A. Angelo. P. 12.
  2. ^ Jacques Vanier. The Universe: A Challenge to the Mind. World Scientific, 2010. P. 548–551.
  3. ^ George Johnson (1999). Strange Beauty: Murray Gell-Mann and the Revolution in Twentieth-Century Physics, p. 755, footnote 108: Oppenheimer coined the term "subnuclear zoo" in a public lecture at the Rochester VI conference; Sec VIII, p 1 of the proceedings.

Further reading

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