Timeline of particle discoveries


This is a timeline of subatomic particle discoveries, including all particles thus far discovered which appear to be elementary given the best available evidence. It also includes the discovery of composite particles and antiparticles that were of particular historical importance.
More specifically, the inclusion criteria are:
TimeEvent
1800William Herschel discovers "heat rays"
1801Johann Wilhelm Ritter made the hallmark observation that invisible rays just beyond the violet end of the visible spectrum were especially effective at lightening silver chloride-soaked paper. He called them "de-oxidizing rays" to emphasize chemical reactivity and to distinguish them from "heat rays" at the other end of the invisible spectrum. The more general term "chemical rays" was adopted shortly thereafter to describe the oxidizing rays, and it remained popular throughout the 19th century. The terms chemical and heat rays were eventually dropped in favor of ultraviolet and infrared radiation, respectively.
1895Discovery of the ultraviolet radiation below 200 nm, named vacuum ultraviolet because it is strongly absorbed by air, by the German physicist Victor Schumann
1895X-ray produced by Wilhelm Röntgen
1897Electron discovered by J. J. Thomson
1899Alpha particle discovered by Ernest Rutherford in uranium radiation
1900Gamma ray discovered by Paul Villard in uranium decay
1911Atomic nucleus identified by Ernest Rutherford, based on scattering observed by Hans Geiger and Ernest Marsden
1919Proton discovered by Ernest Rutherford
1931Deuteron discovered by Harold Urey
1932Neutron discovered by James Chadwick
1932Antielectron, the first antiparticle, discovered by Carl D. Anderson
1937Muon discovered by Seth Neddermeyer, Carl D. Anderson, J.C. Street, and E.C. Stevenson, using cloud chamber measurements of cosmic rays
1947Pion discovered by C. F. Powell's group, including César Lattes and Giuseppe Occhialini
1947Kaon, the first strange particle, discovered by George Dixon Rochester and Clifford Charles Butler
1950Lambda baryon| discovered during a study of cosmic-ray interactions
1955Antiproton discovered by Owen Chamberlain, Emilio Segrè, Clyde Wiegand, and Thomas Ypsilantis
1956Electron neutrino detected by Frederick Reines and Clyde Cowan At the time it was simply referred to as neutrino since there was only one known neutrino.
1962Muon neutrino shown to be distinct from the electron neutrino by a group headed by Leon Lederman
1964Xi baryon discovery at Brookhaven National Laboratory
1969Partons observed in deep inelastic scattering experiments between protons and electrons at SLAC; this was eventually associated with the quark model and thus constitutes the discovery of the up quark, down quark, and strange quark.
1974J/ψ meson discovered by groups headed by Burton Richter and Samuel Ting, demonstrating the existence of the charm quark
1975Tau discovered by a group headed by Martin Perl
1977Upsilon meson discovered at Fermilab, demonstrating the existence of the bottom quark
1979Gluon observed indirectly in three-jet events at DESY
1983W and Z bosons discovered by Carlo Rubbia, Simon van der Meer, and the CERN UA1 collaboration
1995Top quark discovered at Fermilab
1995Antihydrogen produced and measured by the LEAR experiment at CERN
2000Quark-gluon fireball discovered at CERN
2000Tau neutrino first observed directly at Fermilab
2011Antihelium-4 produced and measured by the STAR detector; the first particle to be discovered by the experiment
2012A particle exhibiting most of the predicted characteristics of the Higgs boson discovered by researchers conducting the Compact Muon Solenoid and ATLAS experiments at CERN's Large Hadron Collider