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high-energy physics

NOUN
  1. the branch of physics that studies subatomic particles and their interactions

How To Use high-energy physics In A Sentence

  • The radiation is a by-product of particle accelerators use in high-energy physics.
  • Very early in the study of high-energy physics the only source of high energy particles was in cosmic rays (the first accelerators were not yet in existence).
  • Very soon, accelerators at Ernest Lawrence's Berkeley laboratory were producing artificial pions; the era of high-energy physics had begun.
  • They run into the same trap, whether they are making recommendations about astronomy or high-energy physics or computers or nuclear power or plasma physics. Infinite in All Directions
  • In that realm, a number theorist is not welcome to publish on high-energy physics, and a biochemist is not often invited to a conference of economists — however much their tangential perspectives on the topic might possibly stimulate new thinking. Farewell to a Creative Agitator
  • America's premier high-energy physics machine -- Fermilab's tevatron -- will shut down this year, abandoning the search for the Higgs boson to the European Large Hadron Collider. Seth Shostak: America's "Can't Do" Attitude
  • Lance Cooley of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory is working with a metallic element called niobium to create the next generation of high-energy physics experiments. PhysOrg.com - latest science and technology news stories
  • The radiation is a by-product of particle accelerators use in high-energy physics.
  • This work offers the potential to shrink accelerators from miles to meters in length and open a range of new applications, from medicine to high-energy physics.
  • The radiation is a by-product of particle accelerators use in high-energy physics.
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