Almost all atomic interaction with photons occurs with the atom's electrons.
A neutron is a subatomic particle with no charge.
Some physicists consider that photons, gluons, neutrinos are massless but this affirmation is probable not correct.
A subatomic particle are smaller particles composing nucleons and atoms. The two types of subatomic particle are elementary, they are not made of other particles and composite. A photon is an elementary type of subatomic particle.
Most likely not. Light is made up of photons, and even photons have mass..Thus light is a particle as particles are mass. But to confuse you, even though light = photons & photons = particle & particle = mass; the photons also act as a wave. Which is rather incredible, because it means that a mass also acts as a wave.
Photons and neutrinos dont have mass.
In the atom this particle is the electron. Generally in the particle physics: photons, gluons, neutrinos.
A neutron is a subatomic particle with no charge.
Some physicists consider that photons, gluons, neutrinos are massless but this affirmation is probable not correct.
Technically all subatomic particles have mass. However, the electron is so small that it was once considered to have no mass. Wrong, both photons and gravitons are subatomic particles with no mass.
The three lightest subatomic particles are electrons, neutrinos, and photons. Electrons and neutrinos have very small masses, while photons are massless.
A subatomic particle are smaller particles composing nucleons and atoms. The two types of subatomic particle are elementary, they are not made of other particles and composite. A photon is an elementary type of subatomic particle.
The theoretical particle of light is a photon. The existence of such a particle is still unknown (correct me if I am wrong).
The wave-particle duality of light is the concept that light behaves both as a wave and as a particle. When behaving as a wave, light exhibits phenomena like interference and diffraction. When behaving as a particle, it interacts with matter in discrete packets called photons.
This is valid for some particles as photons and neutrinos.
Photons
No, they don't can.
Pair production and pair annihilation are processes that involve the creation and destruction of particle-antiparticle pairs in particle physics. Pair production occurs when a high-energy photon interacts with a nucleus and produces a particle-antiparticle pair, such as an electron and a positron. This process requires energy to create the particles. On the other hand, pair annihilation is the process where a particle and its corresponding antiparticle collide and annihilate each other, resulting in the production of high-energy photons. This process releases energy in the form of photons. In summary, pair production creates particle-antiparticle pairs from energy, while pair annihilation involves the destruction of particle-antiparticle pairs to release energy in the form of photons.