Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF. Skip to main content. This service is more advanced with JavaScript available. Advertisement Hide. Authors Authors and affiliations Brigitte Falkenburg. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves. This is a preview of subscription content, log in to check access. Aubert, et al. Letters 33 , , — Quarks are particles that are not only hard to see, but pretty much impossible to measure.
These teensy-tiny particles are the basis of subatomic particles called hadrons. With every discovery in this field of particle physics in the past 50 years, however, more questions arise about how quarks influence the universe's growth and ultimate fate. Here are seven strange facts about quarks. The antiparticles of quarks appeared around the same time.
A mystery arose in the s when researchers using the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center found that the electrons were scattering from each other more widely than calculations suggested. More research found that there were at least three locations where electrons scattered more than expected within the nucleon or heart of these atoms, meaning something was causing that scattering.
Create your free account or Sign in to continue. See Subscription Options. Discover World-Changing Science. Stephen Reucroft and John Swain, professors of physics at Northeastern University in Boston, Mass, teamed up to provide this answer: The central concept here is what we mean by "see. Get smart. Sign Up. Support science journalism. Knowledge awaits.
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