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Scientists at TU Delft's Kavli Institute and the Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM Foundation) have succeeded for the first time in detecting a Majorana particle. In the 1930s, the brilliant Italian physicist Ettore Majorana deduced from quantum theory the possibility of the existence of a very special particle, a particle that is its own anti-particle: the Majorana fermion. That 'Majorana' would be right on the border between matter and anti-matter.
Majorana fermion -The concept goes back to Ettore Majorana's 1937 suggestion[1] that neutral spin-1/2 particles can be described by a real wave equation (the Majorana equation), and would therefore be identical to their antiparticle (since the wave function of particle and antiparticle are related by complex conjugation).
The difference between Majorana fermions and Dirac fermions can be expressed mathematically in terms of the creation and annihilation operators of second quantization. The creation operator γ†j creates a fermion in quantum state j, while the annihilation operator γj annihilates it (or, equivalently, creates the corresponding antiparticle). For a Dirac fermion the operators γ†j and γj are distinct, while for a Majorana fermion they are identical.
Originally posted by PerfectPerception
Sorry...I need sleep .forgive my maniacal rantingsedit on 15-4-2012 by PerfectPerception because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by queenannie38
Originally posted by PerfectPerception
Sorry...I need sleep .forgive my maniacal rantingsedit on 15-4-2012 by PerfectPerception because: (no reason given)
There's a thin line between maniacal rantings and creative genius....I'm leaning toward the latter...and that's just based on the term 'willbot!'
Hilarious yet profound. I hope Wilburt's Willbots show up soon..and not in a theater near you...on the rooftops and open fields!