hypercharge

[hahy-per-chahrj]

hy·per·charge

[hahy-per-chahrj]
noun Physics.
1.
a quantum number assigned to baryons and mesons, equal to B + S, where B is the baryon number and S is the strangeness.
2.
the quantum number equal to B + S + C, where C is the charm.

Origin:
1955–60; hyper- + charge
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Hypercharge is always a great word to know.
So is law of gravitation. Does it mean:
a device that produces a nearly parallel, monochromatic, coherent beam of light by exciting atoms to a higher energy level and causing them to radiate
any two masses attract each other with a force equal to a constant, multiplied by the product of the two masses, divided by the square of the distance between them
Collins
World English Dictionary
hypercharge (ˈhaɪpəˌtʃɑːdʒ)
 
n
a property of baryons that is used to account for the absence of certain strong interaction decays

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