Super fact 59 : Most people have heard of electrical charges, positive and negative. However, in nature there are also color charges—red, green, and blue—which are analogous to electric charges. In addition, there are anti-red, anti-green, and anti-blue charges.
Esther’s writing prompt: 10th September : Charge
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As you may know, atoms consist of particles. Electrons surround the nucleus of the atom. The nucleus of the atom is in the middle of the atom and it consists of protons and neutrons. Electrons have a negative charge. Protons have a positive charge. Neutrons do not have an electrical charge. Electrons are so called elementary particles. They are not composed of other particles. Protons and Neutrons, on the other hand, are not elementary particles. They are composite particles consisting of quarks, gluons and quark pairs called mesons.

Quarks have electric charges, just like an electron and a positron, which is why a proton has an electric charge, a positive electric charge. However, in addition quarks have something called color charge. Unlike electric charges, which come in two forms, negative and positive, they come in three forms red, green and blue and in anti-red, anti-green, and anti-blue (well six forms actually). I should say that the color charges, red, green and blue, are not real colors. They are just names. Just electric charges are associated with electric forces; color charges are associated with the nuclear strong force. The strong force is even stronger than the electrical force.
If you take an equal amount of positive and negative electric charges you get something that is electrically neutral. If you take an equal amount of red, green and blue you get what is called white, or neutral. If you take an equal amount of red and anti-red you also get white. Any other mix gives you a net color charge.

I can add that gluons are elementary particles that in many respects are like photons. Light consists of photons. It is because of the photons that we can see. In addition, the photons transport electrical charge. Photons are massless elementary particles with the intrinsic spin of one, and they belong to a group of elementary particles called Bosons. Gluons transport color charge, and they are massless and have an intrinsic spin of one and belong to the same group of elementary particles called Bosons. Unlike photons, they are stuck inside the nucleus and unlike photons they never get to see the light of day. The pun was intended.
Matter, light, and electrical charges are all part of our daily life. We can touch matter, see light, and we come across electrical charge when we touch something that is charged or when we see lightning. However, we do not come across quarks, gluons, and color charges in our daily life because they are hidden at the center of the atoms. Yet they are fundamental to the existence of matter, of us. We know color charges exist, the existence of color charges is an important fact, and yet it is not a well-known fact and often a big surprise to people. Therefore, I think it is a super fact.
The 118 Elements and the 3,500 Isotopes
There are 118 known elements. Why not 500, or just 4 or 5, like the ancient Greeks believed? Each element is defined by it having a certain number of protons and the same number of electrons if it is to be electrically neutral. The problem with having more than one proton in the nucleus is that protons all carry a positive charge and therefore want to push each other away. Same charges repel and different charges attract. What saves the nucleus from blowing apart are the neutrons and the associated strong nuclear force (protons & neutrons) which is guided by the color charges. The quantum model for electricity is called Quantum electrodynamics or QED. The quantum model for color charges is called Quantum chromodynamics or QCD.
As you add more protons it becomes increasingly more difficult for the nuclear forces (strong and weak) to hold the nucleus together. The positive charge of the protons is pushing too hard. That’s why there are only 118 Elements. Another thing to note is that the number of neutrons does not have to be the same as the number of protons. This means that for each element there are several kinds of so-called isotopes. For example, carbon has six protons and six electrons (if the atom is electrically neutral) but the carbon atom / element can have six neutrons, seven neutrons, or eight neutrons. You call them carbon-12, carbon-13, and carbon-14, where the number represents the number of protons plus the number of neutrons.


It is the electrons that determine the chemical properties of an element, and therefore isotopes with a different amount of neutrons are chemically identical. However, they are different with respect to properties that relate to he nucleus, such as radioactivity/stability, and of course weight. Also, when atoms combine into molecules their chemical properties change drastically, but again that is due to the rearrangement of the electrons. There are around 3,500 known isotopes, most of them radioactive.
What is a Quark?
To learn more about Protons, Neutrons, Quarks, Gluons, Color Charges, and Quantum Chromodynamics you can watch this 10 minute video below.
Other Physics Related Superfacts
- Some Things Cannot be Known
- Radon Represents our Largest Exposure to Ionizing Radiation
- We are Star Dust
- The Speed of Light In Vacuum Is a Universal Constant
- Two events may be simultaneous for some but not for others
- The Strange Worlds of Exoplanets
- The vastness of space and the beginning of infinity
- The Bizarre Reality of Black Holes
- Every Symmetry is Associated with a Conservation Law
- GPS uses relativity for accuracy
- Time Dilation Goes Both Ways
- The Pole-Barn Paradox and Solution
- The Enormous Kuiper belt
- Time is a Fourth Dimension
My son was explaining protons and neurons and electrical charge to me recently, or trying to, anyway! I’ll share this with him; he’ll be fascinated by Quarks, too, I think.
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That is very cool. Yes maybe he will be interested in this.
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Hi Thomas, an interesting article.some of this is familiar to me from my school days but some is completely new.
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Thank you Robbie. I think most people have not heard of the color charges and yet they guide the nucleus just like electric charges guide the rest of the atom.
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It’s fascinating. I had not heard of the colour charges.
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Yes I thought it was something that was not well known. The first time I heard about them was in a college physics class. Yet they are as important and fundamental as electrical charges, but of course, not seen in our macro world.
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Hi Thomas, you explain this so well – far better than my teachers used to! You help us understand.
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Thank you so much Esther and thank you for holding this writing prompt series.
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I remember this from high school physics. You’ve done a very accessible explanation here. Cheers.
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Thank you so much for your kind words Lynette
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Thanks for the nice refresher course on elementary particles and charge!
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Thank you so much for your very kind words David.
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Dear Thomas
The greatest pleasure on Sunday is neither free time to watch TV nor parties with friends but reading your posts.
Thanks for liking my post ‘Jilebi’. 🙏💗💛💓❤️
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So fascinating, this one I will read over a few times. Interesting!!!🧐
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Thank you so much Kerri
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I knew that. I knew about quarks having color charges, a triad, and antiparticles have charges complementary to the corresponding positive particles’ charges. Is that the reason that quarks can only form hadrons with an integer charge?
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World Questioner that is a very good question. Mesons, two quark Hadrons, consist of a quark and an anti-quark making them color neutral (white). Baryons consist of three quarks with color charge red, green and blue. Quarks have charges plus or minus 1/3 and 2/3. They combine into whole numbers (-1, 0, 1, 2). The reason behind it is the way the strong force works.
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Charlee: “This is true! From sitting in Dada’s lap when he does the checkbook on Saturday, I have seen all kinds of fundamental charges! There’s dog food charges, cat food charges, vet charges, pet accessory charges …”
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Poor Dada. Those kind of charges are tough to deal with.
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Ain’t that the truth!
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Dear Thomas
I was quite impressed by your post. It has given a new point of view.
Thanks for liking my post, ‘Supreme’ 🙏
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Thank you for your kind words veerites
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You would make a good teacher Thomas for your in-depth explanations. 🙂
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Thank you so much for your kind words Debby
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😋
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Quick question for you, Thomas. I’m not sure it’s relevant to this article, though! My son asked me what your thoughts were on this: where do generation stars come from, or stardust, in the first place? He might have read one of your other articles, so not sure it this applies to this one! Thanks! Ada
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So the first stars in Universe were often big and burned hydrogen and helium. Well it was a nuclear fusion process. This created more complex elements (carbon, oxygen, magnesium). The hydrogen and helium was there already as a result of the big bang. Then these stars ran out of fuel (hydrogen and helium), they imploded, and then exploded. The bigger ones made big explosions called supernovas, and the supernova explosions created even heavier elements, like iron, gold, copper, silver, zinc, uranium, etc. The supernova explosion sent these elements out in space. Second generation and third generation stars formed from the dust clouds created by the supernovas, but these new stars now contained these heavier elements and planets could also form. Like you hint I wrote about this here.
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Thanks so much! He’s seen your kind reply and checked out the article! You certainly got him thinking. He has an insatiable desire to learn and sometimes I worry that my husband and I (not being strong on science) are unable to provide very interesting answers!
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That is amazing! I wish him the greatest luck and success and I hope he’ll come across great teachers.
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