proton
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proton
Summary
proton is a type of quantum particle[1]. proton ranks in the top 5% of type_of_quantum_particle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,480 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- proton is credited with the discovery of Ernest Rutherford[3].
- proton's image is recorded as Proton quark structure.svg[4].
- proton's image is recorded as Hydron.svg[5].
- proton's instance of is recorded as type of quantum particle[6].
- proton's followed by is recorded as deuteron[7].
- proton's location of discovery is recorded as University of Manchester[8].
- proton's GND ID is recorded as 4137643-2[9].
- proton's InChI is recorded as InChI=1S/p+1/i/hH[10].
- proton's InChIKey is recorded as GPRLSGONYQIRFK-FTGQXOHASA-N[11].
- proton's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh85107796[12].
- proton's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 11951081z[13].
- proton's subclass of is recorded as nucleon[14].
- proton's subclass of is recorded as hydron[15].
- proton's NDL Authority ID is recorded as 00574364[16].
- proton's part of is recorded as atomic nucleus[17].
- proton's part of is recorded as proton binding[18].
- proton's part of is recorded as voltage-gated proton channel activity[19].
- proton's part of is recorded as thiamine:proton symporter activity[20].
- proton's part of is recorded as trehalose:proton symporter activity[21].
- proton's part of is recorded as mannose:proton symporter activity[22].
- proton's part of is recorded as fructose:proton symporter activity[23].
- proton's part of is recorded as D-glucose:proton symporter activity[24].
- proton's part of is recorded as allantoin:proton symporter activity[25].
- proton's part of is recorded as amino acid:proton symporter activity[26].
- proton's part of is recorded as proline:proton symporter activity[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
proton is credited with the discovery of Ernest Rutherford[3].
Why It Matters
proton ranks in the top 5% of type_of_quantum_particle entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,480 views/month).[2] proton has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] proton is known by 20 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]