Planck particle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Planck particle is a hypothetical subatomic particle, defined as a tiny black hole whose Compton wavelength is the same as its Schwarzschild radius. Its mass is thus (by definition) equal to the Planck mass, and its Compton wavelength and Schwarzschild radius are equal (also by definition) to the Planck length.

Compared for example to a proton, the Planck particle is extremely small (its radius being equal to the Planck length, which is 10-20 times the proton's radius) and heavy (the Planck mass being 13 quintillion times the proton's mass).

It is thought that such particle would vanish in Hawking radiation, so that it would, in principle, have a lifetime of 1.38 · 10-44 seconds or 0.26 times the Planck time, smaller than could theoretically be measured. However, the existence of such radiation is disputed.

[edit] See also

[edit] External References

This relativity-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages