What is Quark made up of?
A quark is a fundamental particle which possesses both electric charge and ‘strong’ charge. They combine in groups of two or three to form composite objects (called mesons and baryons, respectively), held together by the strong force. Protons and neutrons are familiar examples of such composite objects — both are made up of three quarks. The quarks come in six different species (physicists call them ‘flavors’), each of which have a unique mass. The two lightest, unimaginatively called ‘up’ and ‘down’ quarks, combine to form protons and neutrons. The heavier quarks aren’t found in nature and have so far only been observed in particle accelerators. How do we know they exist? At first many physicists felt they were no more than fictitious entities invented to make certain particle physics calculations easier (legend has it that Murray Gell-Mann took the name from a word in James Joyce’s ‘Finnegan’s Wake’). However, particle physics experiments over the last thirty years have proven other