¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Gravitons
1. graviton [n] - See also: graviton
Lexicographical Neighbors of Gravitons
Literary usage of Gravitons
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Compendious System of Greek Grammar: In English and Greek. An Edition by Edward Wettenhall, William Powell Farrand, William Staughton (1813)
"(2) gravitons,* in <s and vs, which have ©- impure in the genitive, make the
accusative both in -a and -,; as, ¡g,s, contention, "g>З®-, ? ..."
2. Scientific Papers by Peter Guthrie Tait (1900)
"In other cases he omitted the word impressa, as being implied in some other
adjective such as centripeta, gravitons, &c., which he employed to qualify the ..."
3. First Workshop on Grand Unification: New England Center, University of New by Paul H. Frampton, Sheldon L. Glashow, Asim Yildiz (1980)
"The relic black-body radiation consists of photons, gravitons, and neutrinos.
There are about 100 neutrinos/cm3 of each species. ..."
4. The Elements of Greek Grammar: With Notes by Richard Valpy (1821)
"... words not accented on the last syllable are called barytons pr gravitons. )
2 The Interjections are included by the Greeks in the Adverbs. ..."
5. Turn of the Century: 2100 by Charlie Pedersen (2007)
"Electromagnetic force Interacts with charged particles like electrons and certain
quanta, but not gravitons. Like charges repel, opposites attract. ..."