baryon number

noun, Physics.
1.
a quantum number assigned to elementary particles, baryons having baryon number 1, antibaryons −1, and all other observable particles 0; quarks have baryon number 1/3 and antiquarks −1/3.
Examples from the web for baryon number
  • If you know of a possible reason the landscape implies baryon number conservation, let's hear it.
  • Hydrodynamic expansion entropy, baryon number conservation.
  • In this two-component system, local trade-offs conserve baryon number and global electrical neutrality.
  • Proton decay experiments test theories of unification and baryon number violation.
baryon number in Science
baryon number
A quantum number equal to the number of baryons in a system of subatomic particles minus the number of antibaryons. Baryons have a baryon number of +1, while antibaryons have a baryon number of -1. Quarks and antiquarks have baryon numbers of + 1/3 and - 1/3 , respectively (baryons consists of three quarks). Mesons, bosons, and leptons all have baryon numbers of 0. Although the baryon number has always remained unchanged in reactions observed in experiments, it is postulated that in interactions that take place under conditions of very high energies (as during the formation of the universe, for example), proton decay may take place, and baryon number conservation may be violated. See also isospin, strangeness.