Hadrons: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Created page with " A Hadron is type of a non-fundimental particle made up of quarks and held together by the strong nuclear force. Baryons and Mesons are both types Hadrons. Baryons consist o..." |
Cleaned up the references. Removed some stray code. Added some links. |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
A Hadron is type of a non-fundimental particle made up of [[quarks|quarks]] and held together by the [[strong nuclear force|strong nuclear force]]. [[Baryons|Baryons]] and [[Mesons|Mesons]] are both types Hadrons. Baryons consist of three quarks (or 3 antiquarks) where the fractional charges of the 3 quarks combine to make a whole number charge<ref>http://www.particleadventure.org/hadrons.html</ref>. [[Protons|Protons]] and [[Neutrons|Neutrons]] are examples of Baryons. Mesons are formed from a quark and an antiquark. | |||
=== References === | |||
<references /> | <references /> |
Revision as of 14:03, 5 December 2017
A Hadron is type of a non-fundimental particle made up of quarks and held together by the strong nuclear force. Baryons and Mesons are both types Hadrons. Baryons consist of three quarks (or 3 antiquarks) where the fractional charges of the 3 quarks combine to make a whole number charge[1]. Protons and Neutrons are examples of Baryons. Mesons are formed from a quark and an antiquark.