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2006-06-22 08:47:31 · 13 answers · asked by rinjam 2 in Science & Mathematics Physics

13 answers

hmmm, i think they are made from tachyons

2006-06-22 08:50:50 · answer #1 · answered by The Drunken Fool 7 · 1 3

Quarks are one of the two basic constituents of matter in the Standard Model of particle physics. (The others are leptons.) Antiparticles of quarks are called antiquarks. Quarks and antiquarks are the only fundamental particles that interact through all four of the fundamental forces.

The single most important property of quarks is called confinement. This is the experimentally determined fact that except for the top quark, which decays too rapidly, individual quarks are not seen — they are always confined inside subatomic particles called hadrons, such as protons, neutrons, and mesons. This fundamental property is expected to follow from the modern theory of strong interactions, called quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Although there is no mathematical derivation of confinement in QCD, it is easy to show using lattice gauge theory.

2006-06-22 19:18:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Constituents of quarks are often called marks
Never called sharks and some utter barks
They sing like larks and never let farks!

2006-06-22 08:51:12 · answer #3 · answered by darlaman2000 3 · 0 0

All photons are sinusoidal and travel in a sinusoidal wave font.All sine waves are proof of axial rotation.Photons are circles when they're at the Cartesian junction.At the Cartesian junction it's infinitely cold.That's as cold as you can get before accelerating to the velocity of light again.Not just one but three photons make up a photon.Like an Oreo cookie.A red one that spins counter clockwise with a plus charge and mass.A non spinning green one--zero mass and charge.A blue one that spins clockwise with a minus charge and mass.The three photons charge and mass add/cancel to zero mass and zero charge.If you move this photon array,to say, the right on the X axis it is a gluon.If the gluon circle turns in to a sphere and stays in the node you have a quark.If the gluon circle moves in to subspace,the wide open spaces of Cartesia,you have polarized glue.If a glue circle in subspace turns in to a sphere you have a glue ball.Photon circle circumferences are made out of photon circle points that are one point deeper in to the Z axis of Cartesia.These photon circle points are spinning at once again the velocity of light. {my findings}

2006-06-22 10:12:15 · answer #4 · answered by Balthor 5 · 0 0

From time to time astronomers see a giant explosion in some distant galaxy. It means another life form has evolved to the stage where they try to split the quark.

2006-06-22 08:51:05 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Quarks are fundamental particles. You can think of them as an energy density ala relativity, point particles ala quantum, or vibrations of m-branes in calabi-yau manifolds ala string theory. However you choose to look at it however they are complete;y indivisible. They are not Leptons. Leptons are electrons, muons, and tauons, as well as their corresponding neutrinos, and are in a completely different class of fundamental particle.

2006-06-22 12:29:46 · answer #6 · answered by santacruzrc 2 · 0 0

Up Leptons
Down Leptons
Strange Leptons

all 3 types of energy matter hybrids.

2006-06-22 09:06:20 · answer #7 · answered by moikel@btinternet.com 3 · 0 0

Quark is a kind of soft cheese. It's made from milk and rennet like other cheeses.

2006-06-22 08:51:22 · answer #8 · answered by ftmshk 4 · 0 0

imagine a hectic city centre at rush hour. a inebriated physics professor stumbles out of a bar at 12 midday and bangs into 10 random human beings as they rush to the deli for a writer 1st baron verulam sandwhich for lunch. the inebriated professor will loose potential yet income momentum from the human beings he bangs into. they'll loose a million/10 potential equivalent to his mass.

2016-11-15 03:15:34 · answer #9 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I guess that when substances are small enough, they no longer stay as substances, but become waves.

From Schrodinger's equation, every particle has a frequency. and at a small enough size, the particle ceases to exist, only the wave.

2006-06-22 14:59:38 · answer #10 · answered by Kemmy 6 · 0 0

I thought they were the smallest building blocks of sub atomic particles. As far as I know they are pure energy?

There are different types but I think they are basically energy.

2006-06-22 08:51:18 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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