The neutrino is the most elusive of all nuclear particles.
When this is done right, the two nuclei stick together for an instant, exchange some nuclear particles, and then go their separate ways.
As sub-atomic nuclear particles go that is a long, long time.
He studies the nature of neutrinos, which are non-charged nuclear particles.
The total number of nuclear particles is 222, so it might be called radon-222.
The nuclear particles are bound together by the strong nuclear force.
It shot almost straight up into the sky, riding on a glowing beam of nuclear particles.
Some sort of mutual annihilation, as if they were both opposing nuclear particles?
And at the level of nuclear particles, quantum mechanics turned nature into a game of probability.
The location of a nuclear particle is not absolute.