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Definition of Exclusion principle
1. Noun. No two electrons or protons or neutrons in a given system can be in states characterized by the same set of quantum numbers.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Exclusion Principle
Literary usage of Exclusion principle
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Colonization: A Study of the Founding of New Societies by Albert Galloway Keller (1908)
"What is peculiar to the Spanish system and its prototypes is the crude, extreme,
and baldly consistent exhibition of the exclusion-principle rather than ..."
2. The Modern Revolution in Physics by Benjamin Crowell (2003)
"It can be proved mathematically that the Pauli exclusion principle applies ...
Photons, however, are immune to the exclusion principle because their spin is ..."
3. Distributions with Fixed Marginals and Related Topics by B. (Berthold) Schweizer, Ludger Rüschendorf, Michael Dee Taylor (1996)
"In the case V^ii,^, • • -,Zn) = min{xi,x2, • • • ,x„}, indeed, in all the remaining
cases, we need to appeal to the Inclusion-exclusion principle. ..."
4. Infrastructure Mandate for Change 1994-1999 by Meshack M. Khosa (2000)
"Furthermore, their use to afford safety for one ship does not exclude their use
by another and the exclusion principle, which underlies the concept of ..."