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  2. Color charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_charge

    Color charge is a property of quarks and gluons that is related to the particles' strong interactions in the theory of quantum chromodynamics (QCD). Like electric charge, it determines how quarks and gluons interact through the strong force; however, rather than there being only positive and negative charges, there are three "charges", commonly called red, green, and blue.

  3. Proton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proton

    A proton is a stable subatomic particle, symbol p, H +, or 1 H + with a positive electric charge of +1 e (elementary charge).Its mass is slightly less than the mass of a neutron and approximately 1836 times the mass of an electron (the proton-to-electron mass ratio).

  4. Gluon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluon

    The states allow interaction with other color singlets, but not other color states; because long-range gluon interactions do not exist, this illustrates that gluons in the singlet state do not exist either. [11] The color singlet state is: [11] (¯ + ¯ + ¯) /. If one could measure the color of the state, there would be equal probabilities of ...

  5. Quark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quark

    A quark, which will have a single color value, can form a bound system with an antiquark carrying the corresponding anticolor. The result of two attracting quarks will be color neutrality: a quark with color charge ξ plus an antiquark with color charge −ξ will result in a color charge of 0 (or "white" color) and the formation of a meson.

  6. Strong interaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strong_interaction

    Unlike the photon in electromagnetism, which is neutral, the gluon carries a color charge. Quarks and gluons are the only fundamental particles that carry non-vanishing color charge, and hence they participate in strong interactions only with each other. The strong force is the expression of the gluon interaction with other quark and gluon ...

  7. Quantum chromodynamics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_chromodynamics

    There are two different types of SU(3) symmetry: there is the symmetry that acts on the different colors of quarks, and this is an exact gauge symmetry mediated by the gluons, and there is also a flavor symmetry that rotates different flavors of quarks to each other, or flavor SU(3). Flavor SU(3) is an approximate symmetry of the vacuum of QCD ...

  8. Elementary particle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary_particle

    Half of the fermions are leptons, three of which have an electric charge of −1 e, called the electron (e −), the muon (μ −), and the tau (τ −); the other three leptons are neutrinos (ν e, ν μ, ν τ), which are the only elementary fermions with neither electric nor color charge. The remaining six particles are quarks (discussed below).

  9. Color confinement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_confinement

    Besides the quark confinement idea, there is a potential possibility that the color charge of quarks gets fully screened by the gluonic color surrounding the quark. Exact solutions of SU(3) classical Yang–Mills theory which provide full screening (by gluon fields) of the color charge of a quark have been found. [13]