neutron

Etymology
From. in a paper in the . Subsequent usage was sporadic and theoretical, sometimes referring to neutrinos rather than neutrons, and the modern sense was reintroduced alongside by  in 1920.

Noun

 * 1)  A subatomic particle forming part of the nucleus of an atom and having no charge; it is a combination of an up quark and two down quarks.

Translations

 * Arabic: نْيُوتْرُون, نُوتْرُون, نْيُتْرُون, نُتْرُون
 * Armenian:
 * Asturian: neutrón
 * Basque: neutroi
 * Bengali:
 * Breton: ,
 * Bulgarian:
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 中子
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech:
 * Danish:
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: neŭtrono
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Galician:
 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Gujarati: નપુંસણુ
 * Hawaiian: huna hohoki
 * Hebrew:
 * Hindi: नपुंसणु
 * Icelandic:
 * Ido:
 * Interlingua: neutron
 * Irish: neodrón
 * Italian:
 * Japanese:
 * Kazakh:
 * Khmer: អព្យាកតាណូ, ណឺត្រុង
 * Korean:
 * Latvian:
 * Macedonian: неутро́н
 * Manx: naeearane
 * Maori: iramoe
 * Mongolian:
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål:
 * Nynorsk:
 * Persian:
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:
 * Brazilian:
 * European:
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: неу̀тро̄н
 * Roman:
 * Slovene:
 * Spanish:
 * Swahili: nyutroni
 * Swedish:
 * Tagalog: awansik
 * Thai:
 * Tibetan: བར་གནས་རྡུལ་ཕྲན, ཀྲུང་ཙི
 * Turkish:
 * Ukrainian: нейтрон
 * Vietnamese:
 * Welsh: niwtron
 * Yiddish: נייטראָן

Noun

 * 1)  neutron

Noun

 * 1)  neutrons

Etymology
Borrowed from.

Etymology
, a scientific coinage based on.

Noun

 * 1)   subatomic particle having no charge

Noun

 * 1)  neutron

Etymology
.

Etymology
.

Noun

 * 1)  neutron