From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishantiparticlean‧ti‧par‧ti‧cle /ˈæntiˌpɑːtɪkəl $ -ˌpɑːr-/ noun [countable] HPa very small part of an atom that has the opposite electrical charge to the one usually found in atoms
Examples from the Corpus
antiparticle• Because the particle and antiparticle in effect cancel each other out, their appearance together does not violate the laws of physics.• The laws of physics seem to be the same for particles and antiparticles.• The reason is that the laws of physics are not quite the same for particles and antiparticles.• In the same way that matter is constituted of fundamental particles, antiparticles are the building blocks of antimatter.• From the observed absence of such annihilation radiation we can conclude that our galaxy is made entirely of particles rather than antiparticles.• Two antiparticles could therefore be drawn together by antigravity, but a particle of matter would be repelled by an antiparticle.