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Researchers are trying to explain their anomalous findings. Their larger experiment is an ongoing investigation of CP ...
Bizarre particle discovered morphing between matter and antimatter raises mystery about the Big Bang
Subatomic particles can rapidly change between matter and antimatter, scientists have now found. This groundbreaking discovery was made by monitoring charm mesons, which are subatomic particles that ...
Matter and anti-matter are always thought of as opposites. If they interact, they turn into pure energy. But there are cases, thanks to the peculiar laws of quantum mechanics, where particles and ...
Researchers over at the Vienna University of Technology (TU Wien) say that they may have found the elusive glueball in meson f0(1710) through a new theoretical approach to calculate glueball decay ...
The discovery of what appears to be a new subatomic particle with bizarre properties is challenging theorists’ understanding of how matter behaves on the scale of protons and neutrons. What seems ...
University of Melbourne physicists have helped discover a new state of matter that may shed light on the fabric of the universe. University of Melbourne physicists have helped discover a new state of ...
Scientists working at the world’s largest atom smasher have caught a bizarre subatomic particle in the act of changing from matter to antimatter. The discovery could help us understand how the ...
Smashing protons together in search of strange particles, scientists at the Large Hadron Collider near Geneva say they’ve discovered signs of particle decays that have long been predicted, but have ...
The name isn’t particularly catchy—X(3872)—but the discovery of a new subatomic particle adds to the evidence that physicists’ standard model of how matter behaves is seriously incomplete. Stephen ...
Terms to describe the strange world of quantum physics have come to be quite common in our lexicon. Who, for instance, hasn't at least heard of a quark, or a gluon or even Schrodinger's cat? Now there ...
More than three years after discovering a never-before-seen subatomic particle, physicists now know how these particles — called pentaquarks — are put together. New research reveals three completely ...
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