hypernucleus
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hypernucleus
Summary
hypernucleus is a type of quantum particle[1]. hypernucleus draws 69 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_quantum_particle category, ranking #66 of 125).[2]
Key Facts
- hypernucleus is credited with the discovery of Marian Danysz[3].
- hypernucleus is credited with the discovery of Jerzy Pniewski[4].
- hypernucleus's instance of is recorded as type of quantum particle[5].
- hypernucleus's GND ID is recorded as 4161066-0[6].
- hypernucleus's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh85063690[7].
- hypernucleus's subclass of is recorded as atomic nucleus[8].
- hypernucleus's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1952-00-00T00:00:00Z[9].
- hypernucleus's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03_s1d[10].
- hypernucleus's described by source is recorded as Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia, vol. 6[11].
- hypernucleus's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as hypernuclei[12].
- hypernucleus's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as hyperkjerne[13].
- hypernucleus's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 171454935[14].
- hypernucleus's National Library of Israel J9U ID is recorded as 987007536181405171[15].
- hypernucleus's OpenAlex ID is recorded as C171454935[16].
- hypernucleus's Great Russian Encyclopedia portal ID is recorded as giperiadra-8a78c2[17].
- hypernucleus's Yale LUX ID is recorded as concept/199ae8f0-aa7c-43e8-b97e-2c22e71d24d1[18].
Body
Works and Contributions
Credited discoveries include Marian Danysz[3], a physicist[19], 1909–1983[20], of Poland[21], awarded the Fellow of the American Physical Society[22], specialised in nuclear physics[23] and Jerzy Pniewski[4], a physicist[24], 1913–1989[25], of Poland[26], awarded the Knight of the Order of Polonia Restituta[27].
Why It Matters
hypernucleus draws 69 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_quantum_particle category, ranking #66 of 125).[2] hypernucleus has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]