Well, if in a gas you have a mixture of heavier and lighter particles (atoms or molecules, really), the lighter particles will tend to move faster than the heavier particles. The general tendency is for any such particle to have the same energy (mainly kinetic energy). Similarly, in a liquid solution, lighter particles will tend to move faster.
Particle accelerator
Particle accelerator
particle accelerator
A particle accelerator is used to make particles travel very fast using magnetic waves. The particles are then collided with other particles to see what happens.
a particle accelerator
Quarks are the particles that make up protons and neutrons. There are no particles, as far as we know, that make up electrons.
"It doesn't make a particle of difference to me." "The microscope could easily examine a single particle of dust."
Particle physics is the study of the tiny subatomic particles -- the fundimental objects that make up the matter the world is composed of. The study of the behavior of the parts that make up atoms, such as electrons, protons, and neutrons and the yet lower level particles they're composed of is particle physics.
Particle physics is the study of the tiny subatomic particles -- the fundimental objects that make up the matter the world is composed of. The study of the behavior of the parts that make up atoms, such as electrons, protons, and neutrons and the yet lower level particles they're composed of is particle physics.
Temperature IS the average speed of movement of the particles molecules that make up an object. The more heat you add to an object, the faster the molecules move vibrate. There are devices thermometers that indirectly measure this speed, and thus report the temperature.
By definition, a particle is a solid, so your question does not make sense.
The word particle is a noun. The scientist studied the small particle using her powerful microscope. Some synonyms for particle are fragment, grain, scrap, and atom.