An editorially independent publication supported by the Simons Foundation.                                  Rithy

The Physicist Decoding the Nonbinary Nature of the Subatomic World

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2025-01-11 03:30:02

An editorially independent publication supported by the Simons Foundation.

Rithya Kunnawalkam Elayavalli’s experience as a transgender person informs their understanding of the nonbinary world of quarks and gluons.

Many discoveries in physics flow from theory to experiment. Albert Einstein theorized that mass bends the fabric of space-time, and then Arthur Eddington observed the effects of this bending during a solar eclipse. Likewise, Peter Higgs first proposed the existence of the Higgs boson; nearly 50 years later, the particle was discovered at the Large Hadron Collider.

Hadronization is different. It’s the process by which elementary particles called quarks and gluons join together to form protons and neutrons — the components of atoms. No current theory can accurately describe how or why hadronization occurs.

“This is really the opposite of the norm,” says Rithya Kunnawalkam Elayavalli, a high-energy nuclear physicist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee.

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