Particles are the building blocks of matter, and matter
makes up everything you can see. The Earth and moon are matter. So is your
body, your computer’s screen, even the air you breathe. Which means they’re all
made of particles. Lots and lots of particles, of all different kinds, stuck
together.
Atoms, which used to be considered the smallest unit of
matter, are made from particles too. Just how small is an atom? That’s a tricky
question, since different atoms have different sizes and atoms are mostly empty
space. But here’s one way to think about it: Let’s say you wanted to fill up a
baseball-sized bowl with gold atoms. You’d need roughly twice as many of these
atoms as it would take to fill an Earth-sized bowl with baseballs.
Particles that are even smaller than an atom are called
“subatomic.” The main subatomic particles that make up atoms are protons,
electrons and neutrons. But some of these particles are also made of even
smaller particles. Protons and neutrons, for example, are made of subatomic particles
called “quarks.” There are six kinds of quarks, each with a weird name: up,
down, strange, charm, top and bottom.
Dozens of types of subatomic particle exist, and scientists
suspect there may be still more to discover. When a new type emerges, scientists
tend to give them pretty odd-sounding names. To date, we’ve got bosons,
fermions, leptons, muons, pions, neutrinos, photons, gluons, and gravitons.
Neutrinos are unusually weird because they have almost no
mass and they fly through space at almost the speed of light. Three types
exist: muon neutrinos, electron neutrinos and tau neutrinos.
And the strangest particle of all: the tachyon. It’s
considered “hypothetical,” which means it might not even exist. If it does, it
can go faster than the speed of light and travel back in time.
No wonder some physicists refer to these — the
smallest inhabitants of our universe — as their “particle zoo.”
Found in: Science News For Kids
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