- In
particle physics, a
fermion is a
particle that
follows Fermi–Dirac statistics.
Fermions have a half-odd-integer spin (spin 1/2, spin 3/2, etc.) and...
- A
Majorana fermion (/maɪəˈrɑːnə/), also
referred to as a
Majorana particle, is a
fermion that is its own antiparticle. They were
hypothesised by Ettore...
- In physics, a
Dirac fermion is a spin-½
particle (a
fermion)
which is
different from its antiparticle. A vast
majority of
fermions fall
under this category...
- then
properly be
called fermions;
fermions have the
algebraic qualities of spinors. By
general convention, the
terms "
fermion" and "spinor" are often...
- In
lattice field theory,
fermion doubling occurs when
naively putting fermionic fields on a lattice,
resulting in more
fermionic states than expected...
-
usually modelled as an
ideal Fermi gas, an
ensemble of non-interacting
fermions. In a
quantum mechanical description,
particles limited to a
finite volume...
-
other being fermions,
which have odd half-integer spin (1⁄2, 3⁄2, 5⁄2, ...).
Every observed subatomic particle is
either a
boson or a
fermion. Some bosons...
-
Fermi gas is an
idealized model, an
ensemble of many non-interacting
fermions.
Fermions are
particles that obey Fermi–Dirac statistics, like electrons, protons...
- In
lattice field theory,
Wilson fermions are a
fermion discretization that
allows to
avoid the
fermion doubling problem proposed by
Kenneth Wilson in 1974...
-
quantum field theory, a
fermionic field is a
quantum field whose quanta are
fermions; that is, they obey Fermi–Dirac statistics.
Fermionic fields obey canonical...