http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Quantum Mechanics (Chapter 5): Properties of Elementary/Fundamental Particles. --- Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason: • http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience • http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV • http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker --- PARTICLE PHYSICS... More
http://www.facebook.com/ScienceReason ... Quantum Mechanics (Chapter 5): Properties of Elementary/Fundamental Particles. --- Please SUBSCRIBE to Science & Reason: • http://www.youtube.com/Best0fScience • http://www.youtube.com/ScienceTV • http://www.youtube.com/FFreeThinker --- PARTICLE PHYSICS Particle physics is a branch of physics that studies the elementary constituents of matter and radiation, and the interactions between them. It is also called high energy physics, because many elementary particles do not occur under normal circumstances in nature, but can be created and detected during energetic collisions of other particles, as is done in particle accelerators. Research in this area has produced a long list of particles. SUBATOMIC PARTICLES Modern particle physics research is focused on subatomic particles, including atomic constituents such as electrons, protons, and neutrons (protons and neutrons are actually composite particles, made up of quarks), particles produced by radioactive and scattering processes, such as photons, neutrinos, and muons, as well as a wide range of exotic particles. Strictly speaking, the term particle is a misnomer because the dynamics of particle physics are governed by quantum mechanics. As such, they exhibit wave-particle duality, displaying particle-like behavior under certain experimental conditions and wave-like behavior in others (more technically they are described by state vectors in a Hilbert space; see quantum field theory). Following the convention of particle physicists, "elementary particles" refer to objects such as electrons and photons, it is well known that these "particles" display wave-like properties as well. All the particles and their interactions observed to date can almost be described entirely by a quantum field theory called the Standard Model. The Standard Model has 17 species of elementary particles (12 fermions (24 if you count antiparticles separately), 4 vector bosons (5 if you count antiparticles separately), and 1 scalar bosons), which can combine to form composite particles, accounting for the hundreds of other species of particles discovered since the 1960s. The Standard Model has been found to agree with almost all the experimental tests conducted to date. However, most particle physicists believe that it is an incomplete description of nature, and that a more fundamental theory awaits discovery. In recent years, measurements of neutrino mass have provided the first experimental deviations from the Standard Model. Particle physics has had a large impact on the philosophy of science. Some particle physicists adhere to reductionism, a point of view that has been criticized and defended by philosophers and scientists. Part of the debate is described below. THE STANDARD MODEL The current state of the classification of elementary particles is the Standard Model. It describes the strong, weak, and electromagnetic fundamental forces, using mediating gauge bosons. The species of gauge bosons are the gluons, W− and W+ and Z bosons, and the photons. The model also contains 24 fundamental particles, which are the constituents of matter. Finally, it predicts the existence of a type of boson known as the Higgs boson, which is yet to be discovered. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_physics ELEMENTARY PARTICLES In particle physics, an elementary particle or fundamental particle is a particle not known to have substructure; that is, it is not known to be made up of smaller particles. If an elementary particle truly has no substructure, then it is one of the basic building blocks of the universe from which all other particles are made. In the Standard Model, the quarks, leptons, and gauge bosons are elementary particles. Historically, the hadrons (mesons and baryons such as the proton and neutron) and even whole atoms were once regarded as elementary particles. A central feature in elementary particle theory is the early 20th century idea of "quanta", which revolutionised the understanding of electromagnetic radiation and brought about quantum mechanics. For mathematical purposes, elementary particles are normally treated as point particles, although some particle theories such as string theory posit a physical dimension. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary_particle --- The Cassiopeia Project - making science simple! The Cassiopeia Project is an effort to make high quality science videos available to everyone. If you can visualize it, then understanding is not far behind. • http://www.cassiopeiaproject.com . Less
Added Jan 31, 2010
Channel Tech
Duration 6:14 | views 52364
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Youtube Comments 162
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Tags quantum mechanics properties spin elementary fundamental subatomic particles science high energy physics matter radiation electrons protons neutrons quarks photons neutrinos muons hilbert space field theories waves standard model fermions gauge higgs bosons antiparticles gravitons gluons universe leptons hadrons mesons baryons atoms
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Youtube Comments (162)
tylerfh2012 Says:
May 14, 2012 - suppose you have a shell filled with its two electrons, one with spin up and one with spin down. what's to stop another electron with spin up from coming in and cancelling out the first electron with spin up, leaving just the spin-down electron (since having two electrons in the same state yields no electrons)? For that matter, what stops all the electrons in the universe from disappearing because of this?
bezeker12 Says:
May 4, 2012 - 0:10 that guy scares the shit out of me
starmakina Says:
Apr 12, 2012 - Is it Pauli's exclusion principle that they were talking about?
Fiki2k7 Says:
Apr 1, 2012 - This is interesting, the trick now is to remember it.
milosQaX Says:
Feb 10, 2012 - Omg the animation quality ahahahahahah.... great video though.
u7ht67 Says:
Feb 4, 2012 - CERTAINLY KEVIN!
osclarkos Says:
Feb 3, 2012 - brilliant video some very interesting points
michaelaimen Says:
Feb 3, 2012 - GREAT MOVIE
grisgrisy Says:
Feb 2, 2012 - very interesting thanks
MegaRoFLL Says:
Jan 30, 2012 - Prety circles and colors XD
willbirful Says:
Jan 24, 2012 - love the video man
PeaceWithTheseEyes Says:
Jan 23, 2012 - In "With These Eyes" a young woman is faced with the wrath of industry when she is about to discover the secret behind Quantum Power, a real, sustainable green energy source. On her global quest for the truth, the young woman is faced with society's plagues like the flu vaccine, television and chem trails.
osclarkos Says:
Jan 19, 2012 - really informative and interesting
bribribri56 Says:
Jan 18, 2012 - i enjoyed this vid
PaperSoapy Says:
Jan 13, 2012 - @TheFifthApes Yeah, it is interesting to look at how less informed people looked at science so long ago. The problem is that with QM feynman still isnt wrong...
heyzeusful Says:
Jan 5, 2012 - lol on the twins bit. "We can treat them separately." "We CAN?!?!?!"
lilsadri27 Says:
Dec 19, 2011 - Thank you very much sir, this homework is a bit confusing and not the best in physics
jmitterii2 Says:
Dec 18, 2011 - Leptons: ie. electrons, Hadrons: ie. quarks that make up protons and neutrons, and bosons: ie photons.
lilsadri27 Says:
Dec 14, 2011 - Im doing physics home work and its hard for me to figure out can someone tell me if this is right? All matter is made of twelve fundamental particles, which is made of ___Protons___, ___Neutrons____ and ____Quarts_.??
Infocollective22 Says:
Dec 2, 2011 - They don't as such phase out and into existence, rather it is a law called Quantum Uncertainty, meaning all particles aren't in one exact place, but that they have a better chance of existing in one place than somewhere else. It's called a probability cloud. At these tiny scales, nothing is absolutely certain and defined. A bit "fuzzy", almost.
chan625 Says:
Sep 22, 2011 - I understood untill Spinning tops came....Then I was stoned
boomerangerman Says:
Sep 11, 2011 - People just say that when theyre too lazy to make any effort in learning it.
limeffdd Says:
Sep 10, 2011 - what exactly is a pause button?
vksonakia Says:
Sep 5, 2011 - Unification of Isolated science and GOD particle exist within Human body which is CERN Laboratory of Nature.for details see YOU TUBE VK SONAKIA and read article on all voices.com -certainty-tool-is-higgin-boson-or-god-particle-which-exist-in-human-body.We have already developed next generation easy to learn unified science.world scientist are welcome to see and test FIT-Future Imaging Tool technology vk sonakia unified field scientist bhopal INDIA vksonakia@yahoo.co.in
jcfbell3001 Says:
Sep 3, 2011 - cool, thanks for the reply...