Yeah, I read the article, which IIRC stated that the plasma was created by colliding Pb
+ ions in the new Large Hadron Collider (LHC), where previously they were just colliding protons. The problem that I have with it is a pedantic one. I don't know particle physics well enough to really "believe in" quarks and gluons, nor do I quite get billing it as something for quantum physicists to rejoice over, as far as I can tell, it is not a quantised state (plasma - free particles - no quantisation of energy levels but rather a continuum of energies, part of the definition of a plasma).
The developments from the LHC I look forward to are antimatter production and storage spinoff technologies. Storing that much energy I think may be the key to reaching the stars.
What the heck is a hadron anyway? (I think it may be a generic term for charged particles?)
edit: yeah...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadron Hadrons are categorized into two families: baryons (made of three quarks) and mesons (made of one quark and one antiquark).
The best-known hadrons are protons and neutrons (both baryons), which are components of atomic nuclei
Protons & neutrons I get, but smaller than that and I am lost.