Dictionary
electron
noun
The subatomic particle having a negative charge and orbiting the nucleus; the flow of electrons in a conductor constitutes electricity.
synonyms
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The word 'electron' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to a negatively charged particle that orbits the nucleus of an atom or to mean something that has been electrically charged. For example: "The electron has an important role in the functioning of a computer."
Exact(55)
Summary: The LHC is back in business again, producing data for physics at 13 Tera electron volts.
The ways these dimensions are put together into these tiny little spaces determine how particles will behave, what particles will exist, what the constants of nature are—quantities like dark energy or the electric charge of an electron.
Unfortunately, creating a band gap big enough to turn graphene into a usable semiconductor destroys the very properties especially the high electron mobility that made the material so attractive in the first place.
But if they do exist and make up the bulk of dark matter in the cosmos they ought to leave traces that AMS can detect.When two neutralinos bump into each other, the theory goes, they should annihilate one another and produce in their stead an electron and its antimatter equivalent, a positron.
An electron can be speeded up, slowed down or even stopped.
At the moment it would be no rival to printing metals with a laser or electron beam, a technique that a number of aerospace companies are now using.
Similar(5)
Scientists therefore have to resort to a bizarre toolkit of indirect methods such as X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance or cryo-electron microscopy to provide the data that allow three-dimensional molecular models to be reconstructed in the computer.
These included 6.4m electrons and 400,000 positrons that had energies ranging from 0.5 to 350 giga-electron-volts (GeV), measured in the esoteric units particle physicists like to use.
In a sheet, this electron-coupling effect disappears, and the electrons are free to behave in entirely different ways.
The "quanta" of energy (ie, photons) carried by radio waves in, say, the UHF band used by television, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, cordless phones, mobile phones, microwave ovens, garage remotes and many other household devices have energy levels of a few millionths of an electron-volt.
If the proposed transmutation does not occur in nature, it ought to have seen no more than 49 (the result of electron-neutrinos streaming in from space or radioactive rocks on Earth).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com