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  2. Photon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photon

    Photons are massless particles that can move no faster than the speed of light measured in vacuum. The photon belongs to the class of boson particles. As with other elementary particles, photons are best explained by quantum mechanics and exhibit wave–particle duality, their behavior featuring properties of both waves and particles. [2]

  3. Subatomic particle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subatomic_particle

    According to the Standard Model of particle physics, a subatomic particle can be either a composite particle, which is composed of other particles (for example, a baryon, like a proton or a neutron, composed of three quarks; or a meson, composed of two quarks), or an elementary particle, which is not composed of other particles (for example ...

  4. Photon structure function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photon_structure_function

    Photons with high photon energy can transform in quantum mechanics to lepton and quark pairs, the latter fragmented subsequently to jets of hadrons, i.e. protons, pions, etc.At high energies E the lifetime t of such quantum fluctuations of mass M becomes nearly macroscopic: t ≈ E/M 2; this amounts to flight lengths as large as one micrometer for electron pairs in a 100 GeV photon beam, while ...

  5. Photonic molecule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photonic_molecule

    The interaction of the photons suggests that the effect could be employed to build a system that can preserve quantum information, and process it using quantum logic operations. [4] The system could also be useful in classical computing, given the much-lower power required to manipulate photons than electrons. [4]

  6. Elementary particle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary_particle

    Low-energy electrons do scatter in this way, but, above a particular energy, the protons deflect some electrons through large angles. The recoiling electron has much less energy and a jet of particles is emitted. This inelastic scattering suggests that the charge in the proton is not uniform but split among smaller charged particles: quarks.

  7. Electron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron

    If a body has more or fewer electrons than are required to balance the positive charge of the nuclei, then that object has a net electric charge. When there is an excess of electrons, the object is said to be negatively charged. When there are fewer electrons than the number of protons in nuclei, the object is said to be positively charged.

  8. Pion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pion

    It decays via the electromagnetic force, which explains why its mean lifetime is much smaller than that of the charged pion (which can only decay via the weak force). Anomaly-induced neutral pion decay. The dominant π 0 decay mode, with a branching ratio of BR γγ = 0.98823, is into two photons:

  9. Double-slit experiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-slit_experiment

    The experiment can be done with entities much larger than electrons and photons, although it becomes more difficult as size increases. The largest entities for which the double-slit experiment has been performed were molecules that each comprised 2000 atoms (whose total mass was 25,000 atomic mass units ).