Home (Exclusion principle)
Home  
 
 
Home » Astronomy » Exclusion principle


 

Exclusion principle

Astronomy Excited AtomExosat

Pauli exclusion principle:
The Pauli exclusion principle is an assertion that no two electrons in an atom can be at the same time in the same state or configuration, ...

 


Exclusion Principle- the idea that two identical spin-1/2 particles cannot have (within the limits set by the uncertainty principle) both the same position and the same velocity ...

EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE - Property that fermions of the same type that can interact with each other can not simultaneously occupy the same quantum state.

Exclusion Principle
(a) Pauli's exclusion principle says that there could not be more than one electron in each quantum state. [D89]
(b) The rule that no two fermion can occupy the same quantum state. [F88] ...

Pauli Exclusion Principle
(a) States that particles with half integer spins cannot occupy the same quantum states. This manifests itself as the reason why solid objects cannot exist in the same physical space. [c97] ...

Pauli Exclusion Principle - A physical law that limits the number of particles of a particular kind that can be placed in a given volume. A gas in which that limit is reached is degenerate ...

The Pauli exclusion principle is a quantum mechanics principle formulated by Wolfgang Pauli in 1925. It states that no two identical particles fermions may occupy the same quantum state simultaneously....

The Pauli exclusion principle states that no two electrons with the same spin can occupy the same energy state in the same volume.

[2.6] THE PAULI EXCLUSION PRINCIPLE
[3.0] The Uncertainty Principle & Copenhagen Interpretation
[3.1] THE HEISENBERG UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE ...

Fermi-Dirac statistics (NASA Thesaurus) The statistics of an assembly of identical half-integer spin particles; such particles have wave functions antisymmetrical with respect to particle interchange and satisfy the Pauli exclusion principle.

Under the conditions found in the stage 9 red giant core, a rule of quantum mechanics known as the Pauli exclusion principle (after Wolfgang Pauli, one of the founding fathers of quantum physics) prohibits the electrons in the core from being ...

Since electrons obey the Pauli exclusion principle, no two electrons can occupy the same state, and they must obey Fermi-Dirac statistics, ...

Baryons are strongly interacting fermions — that is, they experience the strong nuclear force and are described by Fermi-Dirac statistics, which apply to all particles obeying the Pauli exclusion principle.

A neutron star is formed from the collapsed remnant of a massive star, a Type II, Type Ib, or Type Ic supernova and models predict that it consists mostly of neutrons. It is a cold star supported by the Pauli exclusion principle repulsion between ...

(This should not be confused with the electrical repulsion of electrons, but is a consequence of the Pauli exclusion principle.) With no fuel left to burn, ...

Neutron stars are very hot and are supported against further collapse because of the Pauli exclusion principle. This principle states that no two neutrons (or any other fermionic particle) can occupy the same place and quantum state simultaneously.

See also: Electron, Element, Mass, Force, Energy