Bigpapi777
- 9
- 0
are they made up of the same as particles in physics?
tiny-tim said:The atoms are made of electrons protons neutrons and pions (but no photons or neutrinos).
rebeka said:Isn't it a not so entirely accurate statement to say "not photons or neutrinos" as these are a fundamental building block of quarks, absorbed wave/particle duality or not...they are in there however disregarded!
Redbelly98 said:… the stuff that ordinary atoms are made of. I was questioning the inclusion of pions in this list.
Bigpapi777 said:like are they made up of photons or electrons?
Bigpapi777 said:so our bodies are made of electrons?
rebeka said:… I'm saying photons are included in the very long list of particles that make up not only the human body …
Can we say people are made up of light? I say yes we can!
(I think we can make a vote on this)
Hi, the concept of the holographic principle has nothing to do with everything being made up of light. This isn't something I'm familiar with so see here:rebeka said:You obviously didn't read the article Holographic Universe in Sci Ams special nuclear edition a few years back........ da da ching
as to how many particles are known the answers is oh god......depends on what your area of expertise is...I like dots.......
[PLAIN]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_principle said:The[/PLAIN] physical universe is widely seen to be composed of "matter" and "energy". In his 2003 article published in Scientific American magazine, Jacob Bekenstein summarized a current trend started by John Archibald Wheeler, a collaborator of Albert Einstein, which suggests scientists may "regard the physical world as made of information, with energy and matter as incidentals.
I don't think there are 400 elementary particles. See here:Bigpapi777 said:im no expert,what i meant is how many known are they around 400?
Bigpapi777 said:well the guy who told me i don't know what to think of what he said.how about i put the conversation on here,and could you guys help me out?
Bigpapi777 said:are they made up of the same as particles in physics?