Quark vs Quarkless - What's the difference?
quark | quarkless |
(particle) In the Standard Model, an elementary subatomic particle which forms matter. Quarks have never been found alone as of this writing, They combine to form hadrons, such as protons and neutrons.
* 1993 , Gell-Mann won the linguistic battle once again: his choice, a croaking nonsense word, was "quark". (After the fact, he was able to tack on a literary antecedent when he found the phrase "Three quarks for Muster Mark" in Finnegans Wake, but the physicists quark was pronounced from the beginning to rhyme with "cork".) — (James Gleick), Genius: Richard Feynman and Modern Physics
* {{quote-magazine, year=2012, month=March-April
, author=(Jeremy Bernstein)
, title=A Palette of Particles
, volume=100, issue=2, page=146
, magazine=(American Scientist)
(computing, X Window System) An integer that uniquely identifies a text string.
A soft creamy cheese, eaten throughout northern, central, and eastern Europe, very similar to cottage cheese except that it is usually not made with rennet.
(physics) Without quarks.
* 1982 , Jean Thanh Van Tran, Elementary Hadronic Processes and Heavy Ion Interactions
* 2002 , Jean-Paul Blaizot, Edmond Iancu, QCD Perspectives on Hot and Dense Matter
As a noun quark
is quark (cheese) or quark can be a quark (particle).As an adjective quarkless is
(physics) without quarks.quark
English
(wikipedia quark)Etymology 1
First used in 1963 by one of the theorists who postulated the existence of quarks, Wikipedia article.Noun
(en noun)citation, passage=There were also particles no one had predicted that just appeared. Five of them […, i]n order of increasing modernity,
Derived terms
* antiquarkSee also
* beauty quark * bottom quark * charm quark * down quark * strange quark * top quark * truth quark * up quarkEtymology 2
(etyl) Quark, from late (etyl) twarc, from a (etyl) language, compare (etyl) .Alternative forms
* qvarkNoun
(-)See also
* curdEtymology 3
Onomatopoeia, from the sound of the squawk.quarkless
English
Adjective
(-)- How does one know a quarkless state or glueball when one sees one?
- In contrast, all quarkless baryons are gauge invariant.