How matter’s hidden complexity unleashed the power of nuclear physics - SN

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Calder Hall, in Cumbria, England, was the first full-scale commercial nuclear power plant (shown in 1962). Bettmann/Getty Images

How matter’s hidden complexity unleashed the power of nuclear physics In the last century, physicists have revealed a complex world of fundamental particles By Emily Conover April 8, 2021 Matter is a lush tapestry, woven from a complex assortment of threads. Diverse subatomic particles weave together to fabricate the universe we inhabit. But a century ago, people believed that matter was so simple that it could be constructed with just two types of subatomic fibers — electrons and protons. That vision of matter was a nononsense plaid instead of an ornate brocade. Physicists of the 1920s thought they had a solid grasp on what made up matter. They knew that atoms contained electrons surrounding a positively charged nucleus. And they knew that each nucleus contained a number of protons, positively charged particles identified in 1919. Combinations of those two particles made up all of the matter in the 1


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