different between fermion vs fermionize
fermion
English
Etymology
From Fermi +? -on, after Italian-American physicist Enrico Fermi. Coined by English physicist Paul Dirac in 1945 in a lecture titled "Developments in Atomic Theory".
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?f??m??n/
Noun
fermion (plural fermions)
- (particle physics, Standard Model) Any elementary or composite particle that has half-integer spin and thus obeys Fermi–Dirac statistics and the Pauli exclusion principle (equivalently, a particle for which the wavefunction of any system of identical such particles changes sign whenever two are swapped); a baryon, a lepton or a quark;
(slightly more loosely) any such particle or any composite particle composed of fermions.- 1994, István Montvay, Gernot Münster, Quantum Fields on a Lattice, Cambridge University Press, page 208,
- A remarkable feature of lattice regularization is the appearance of several fermion species per fermion field in the lattice action.
- 1996, Georges Bouzerar, Didier Poilblanc, Persistent Currents in Interacting Electronic Systems, T. Martin, G. Montambaux, J. Trân Thanh Vân (editors), Correlated Fermions and Transport in Mesoscopic Systems, Editions Frontieres, page 149,
- For 2D systems, going beyond first order pertu[r]bative calculations, we show that the second harmonic of the current is strongly suppressed in the case of spinless fermion models but significantly enhanced for the Hubbard model.
- 1996, Georg G. Raffelt, Stars as Laboratories for Fundamental Physics, University of Chicago Press, page 253,
- It is not known whether the Higgs mechanism is the true source for the masses of the fundamental fermions.
- 1994, István Montvay, Gernot Münster, Quantum Fields on a Lattice, Cambridge University Press, page 208,
Hyponyms
- baryon
- lepton
- quark
Coordinate terms
- boson (particle with integer spin)
Derived terms
Translations
See also
- fermionic field
Further reading
- Pauli exclusion principle on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Fermi–Dirac statistics on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Spin–statistics theorem on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Standard Model on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Dutch
Etymology
From Enrico Fermi (Italian-American physicist) +? -on.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: fer?mi?on
Noun
fermion n (plural fermionen)
- (physics) fermion
Esperanto
Noun
fermion
- accusative singular of fermio
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /f??.mj??/
Noun
fermion m (plural fermions)
- (physics) fermion
Indonesian
Etymology
Borrowed from English fermion
Noun
fermion (first-person possessive fermionku, second-person possessive fermionmu, third-person possessive fermionnya)
- (physics) fermion.
Polish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?f?r.m??n/
Noun
fermion m inan
- (physics) fermion
Declension
Derived terms
- fermionowy
Further reading
- fermion in Polish dictionaries at PWN
fermion From the web:
- fermion meaning
- what fermionic condensates
- what are fermions and bosons
- what are fermions made of
- what is fermionic condensate matter
- what does fermin mean
- what are fermions mcq
- what gives fermions mass
fermionize
English
Etymology
fermion +? -ize
Verb
fermionize (third-person singular simple present fermionizes, present participle fermionizing, simple past and past participle fermionized)
- (physics) To treat a system as if it were composed of fermions
Related terms
- fermionization
fermionize From the web:
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