I believe it was aristotle, i could be wrong, but he once had an inquiry, and it was this. If i have a stick of butter and i keep cutting it in half, can i cut it in half until i can do so no longer? Well in approximately 450 BCE, Democritus made the term átomos which means "uncuttable". His answer to this question was no. he beielved there was an indivisible particle, much too small to be seen. Was he on to something, or was aristotle?
The atom
Modern day, the theoretical atom has given birth to equally theoretical babies, sub-atomic particles
proton (+)
electron (-)
neutron (n)
im leaving out a truckload of them, to name some we have leptons, quarks, photons, muons, tauons.. and other. but the three above are the most known and the most useful.
I have a question, actually.... tons, but besides that i have one.
how many times can you cut a sub-atomic particle in half until you can do so no longer? i understand that the arrangements of said particles above create all of the diversity within elements, but ultimately you can keep cutting the butter can't you?
It is shown by experiments that atomic theory has proven useful, it makes predictions and the predictions concur with the results. i dont believe in atomic theory but it is very useful. i guess i could say im not an "Atomist" eh? lol.
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In the latest Science News weekly magazine the main article is about the new CERN particle accelerator which will try to prove the existence of the Higgs boson.
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The simple answer to your question is yes. The real question is can Dark Matter be divided?
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How can you experiment, let alone divide something which cannot be seen?
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That is what scientists want to and are trying to find out.
Edit: Well obviously not all scientists.
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Why are you talking about Dark Matter?
It should be about Matter or Anti-Matter.

And for the CERN thing, I've read that the approximations says that we will need up to 2 TeraVolt to find out the Higgs boson and the new CERN shit will go up to 14 TeV!!
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How can you experiment, let alone divide something which cannot be seen?
Doing it the fun way. Accelerating it up to incredible speeds then making it collide against other atoms. Particle accelerators literally blow them up
?????
Also they can use even smaller things to detect that. (Electrons)
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everything about particles is highly theoritical. The usen detectors are pretty advanced material, so they use high amount of energy and matter.
i don't know muchabout the process particle colliders work. I know they use electrically charged particles (or how it is called) and large magnets. then, on several spot, two beam of that matter collid, and there are detectors, which react to the upcomming radiation (caused by collision maybe?) and computers register values showed by detectors and thats all i know.
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everything about particles is highly theoritical
There is a big differance between a hypothesis and a theory and some random idea.
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everything about particles is highly theoritical
There is a big differance between a hypothesis and a theory and some random idea.
Lol.. well said
So far, we have not been able to divide the subatomic particles into smaller ones; fermions and bosons are currently the smallest isolatable "piece" of matter.
It doesnt matter wether we can or cannot divide it as of yet... it only matters if we can understand it.
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