Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fermion> ?p ?o }
- Fermion abstract "In particle physics, a fermion (a name coined by Paul Dirac from the surname of Enrico Fermi) is any particle characterized by Fermi–Dirac statistics. These particles obey the Pauli exclusion principle. Fermions include all quarks and leptons, as well as any composite particle made of an odd number of these, such as all baryons and many atoms and nuclei. Fermions differ from bosons, which obey Bose–Einstein statistics.A fermion can be an elementary particle, such as the electron, or it can be a composite particle, such as the proton. According to the spin-statistics theorem in any reasonable relativistic quantum field theory, particles with integer spin are bosons, while particles with half-integer spin are fermions.Besides this spin characteristic, fermions have another specific property: they possess conserved baryon or lepton quantum numbers. Therefore what is usually referred as the spin statistics relation is in fact a spin statistics-quantum number relation.As a consequence of the Pauli exclusion principle, only one fermion can occupy a particular quantum state at any given time. If multiple fermions have the same spatial probability distribution, then at least one property of each fermion, such as its spin, must be different. Fermions are usually associated with matter, whereas bosons are generally force carrier particles, although in the current state of particle physics the distinction between the two concepts is unclear.At low temperature fermions show superfluidity for uncharged particles and superconductivity for charged particles.Composite fermions, such as protons and neutrons, are the key building blocks of everyday matter. Weakly interacting fermions can also display bosonic behavior under extreme conditions, such as superconductivity.".
- Fermion thumbnail Enrico_Fermi_1943-49.jpg?width=300.
- Fermion wikiPageID "11529".
- Fermion wikiPageLength "8170".
- Fermion wikiPageOutDegree "94".
- Fermion wikiPageRevisionID "683048587".
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink N_expansion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink QCD.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink QCD_correspondence.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Antiparticle.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Anyon.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Atom.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Atomic_nucleus.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Baryon.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Baryonic_matter.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Bose–Einstein_statistics.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Boson.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Bottom_quark.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Carbon-13.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Concepts_in_physics.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Enrico_Fermi.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fermions.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Particle_physics.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Quantum_field_theory.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Subatomic_particles.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Charm_quark.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Chirality_(physics).
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Composite_fermion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Composite_fermions.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Composite_particle.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Cooper_pair.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Dirac_fermion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Dirac_quantization_condition.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Down_quark.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Dyon.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Electron.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Electron_neutrino.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Elementary_particle.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Enrico_Fermi.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Even_and_odd.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Fermionic_condensate.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Fermionic_field.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Fermi–Dirac_statistics.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Force_carrier.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Fractional_quantum_Hall_effect.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Hadron.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Half-integer.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Helium-3.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Identical_particles.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Integer.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Kogut–Susskind_fermion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Lepton.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink List_of_particles.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Magnetic_monopole.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Majorana_fermion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Matter.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Muon.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Muon_neutrino.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Neutrino.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Neutron.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Non-linear_sigma_model.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Nonlinear_sigma_model.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Parastatistics.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Parity_(mathematics).
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Particle.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Particle_physics.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Dirac.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Pauli_exclusion_principle.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Phonon.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Pion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Proton.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_chromodynamics.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_field_theory.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_state.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Quark.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Skyrmion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Soliton.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Spin-statistics_theorem.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Spin_(physics).
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Spin–statistics_theorem.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Standard_Model.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Strange_quark.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Superconductivity.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Superfluid.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Superfluidity.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Tau_(particle).
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Tau_neutrino.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Theory_of_relativity.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Tony_Skyrme.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Top_quark.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Topological_defect.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Topological_soliton.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Up_quark.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Weyl_fermion.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink Weyl_semimetal.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink File:Asymmetricwave2.png.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLink File:Enrico_Fermi_1943-49.jpg.
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fermi".
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fermion".
- Fermion wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fermionic field".