A2A. Subatomic particles that visible are responses, resonances, (bleeps on a screen) to particluar experiments. As such, they are visible to experiment and exist in space and time. The current experiments are not sensitive enough to find response... read more
Subatomic particles that visible are responses, resonances, (bleeps on a screen) to particluar experiments. As such, they are visible to experiment and exist in space and time. The current experiments are not sensitive enough to find responses, resonances, structure inside particles such as quarks, electrons, etc. read more
Some detectors can reveal subatomic particles by making their tracks visible to the naked eye. The first such detector was the cloud chamber, developed in 1911 by Charles Thomson Rees Wilson in Cambridge, UK – an invention for which he received the 1927 Nobel prize in physics. A cloud chamber is a box containing a supersaturated vapour. read more