color charge
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From a loose analogy to the set of primary colors. The charge property has nothing to do with visible color.
Noun
color charge (countable and uncountable, plural color charges)
- (physics) In the Standard Model of particle physics, a property possessed by quarks, anti-quarks, and gluons that determine rules for how these particles may interact. There are three pairs of colors and anti-colors: red, green, blue, and their corresponding anti-colors (e.g. anti-red).
Related terms
See also
- strong force, strong nuclear force
- strong interaction, strong nuclear interaction
- residual strong force, nuclear force
Further reading
-
Standard Model on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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