STANDARD MODEL
Lepton number
A conserved quantum number defined by L = number of leptons - number of antileptons
Elementary particle
A particle whose substructure is unknown
Antiparticle
A particle with the same mass and opposite charge and/or spin to a corresponding particle, for example positron and electron
Baryon number
A strictly conserve additive quantum number of a system defined by B = 1/3 (number of quarks - number of antiquarks)
Gauge bosons
Carrier or exchange particles that govern particle interaction and the mediation of the four fundemental forces
Baryon
Compositive subatomic particles made up of three quarks
Six types of leptons
Electron, electron neutrino, muon, muon neutrino, tau, tau neutrino
Four types of gauge bosons
Gluon, photon, Z boson and W boson
Electromagnetic forces
One of the four fundamental forces. The electromagnetic force is mediated by photons.
Strong nuclear force
One of the four fundamental forces. The strong nuclear force acts over small distances in the nucleus to hold the nucleons together against the repulsive electrostatic forces exerted between the protons. Mediated by gluons.
Weak nuclear force
One of the four fundamental forces. The weak nuclear force is responsible for radioactive decay and is mediated by W and Z bosons.
Leptons
Particles that are governed by the weak nuclear force and electromagnetism since they have charge
Meson
Subatomic particles composed on one quart and one antiquark
Quarks
Subatomic particles governed by the strong nuclear force that constitute hadrons
Six types of quarks
Up, down, charm, strange, top, bottom