Proton Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Proton stocks.

Proton Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 15 PLUG Plug Power Unveils Advanced Hydrogen-Powered Truck, Stock Shoots Higher, But Technicals Reveal Mixed Signals
May 15 PLUG Plug Power: Conditional DOE Loan Guarantee Meets Meme Stock Frenzy - Hold
May 15 PLUG Plug to Revolutionize Middle-Mile Delivery with Class 6 Fuel Cell Electric Truck Integration
May 15 PLUG DOE awards $1.7B conditional loan guarantee to Plug Power to build 6 clean hydrogen factories
May 15 PLUG Is Plug Power Stock a Buy After Cratering 75%?
May 15 PLUG Plug Power Secures $1.66B Conditional Loan Guarantee from DOE
May 15 PLUG GameStop, AMC, Plug Power, Rumble, Tesla: Why These 5 Stocks Are Investors' Radars Today
May 14 PLUG The $1.7 Billion News That Sent Plug Power Stock Surging: Here's What You Need to Know Before Buying
May 14 PLUG UPDATE 1-US offers conditional $1.66 billion loan to hydrogen producer Plug Power
May 14 PLUG Plug Power: Consider Selling The Rally
May 14 PLUG Wall Street Trades Flat On Mixed Producer Inflation; Meme Stocks See Wild Ride, Bitcoin Drops: What's Driving Markets Tuesday?
May 14 PLUG Why FuelCell Energy, Bloom, and Clean Energy Fuels Rose Today
May 14 PLUG Meme Stocks, Tariffs, Inflation Data Trigger Some Volatile Trade: Rent The Runway, Plug Power, Rivian
May 14 PLUG Sector Update: Energy Stocks Slipping Tuesday Afternoon
May 14 PLUG This New Energy Stock Is Up 40% After The U.S. Government Throws It A Lifeline
May 14 PLUG Is Plug Power Stock Going to $5? 1 Wall Street Analyst Thinks So.
May 14 PLUG Why Shares of Plug Power Are Skyrocketing Today
May 14 PLUG Plug Power Stock Is Racing Higher. It’s Getting the Money for Green Hydrogen Plants.
May 14 PLUG Biggest stock movers today: Meme stocks, BABA, ALC, and more
May 14 PLUG Plug Power Stock Soars After Government Loan Commitment
Proton

A proton is a subatomic particle, symbol p or p+, with a positive electric charge of +1e elementary charge and a mass slightly less than that of a neutron. Protons and neutrons, each with masses of approximately one atomic mass unit, are collectively referred to as "nucleons".
One or more protons are present in the nucleus of every atom; they are a necessary part of the nucleus. The number of protons in the nucleus is the defining property of an element, and is referred to as the atomic number (represented by the symbol Z). Since each element has a unique number of protons, each element has its own unique atomic number.
The word proton is Greek for "first", and this name was given to the hydrogen nucleus by Ernest Rutherford in 1920. In previous years, Rutherford had discovered that the hydrogen nucleus (known to be the lightest nucleus) could be extracted from the nuclei of nitrogen by atomic collisions. Protons were therefore a candidate to be a fundamental particle, and hence a building block of nitrogen and all other heavier atomic nuclei.
In the modern Standard Model of particle physics, protons are hadrons, and like neutrons, the other nucleon (particles present in atomic nuclei), are composed of three quarks. Although protons were originally considered fundamental or elementary particles, they are now known to be composed of three valence quarks: two up quarks of charge +2/3e and one down quark of charge –1/3e. The rest masses of quarks contribute only about 1% of a proton's mass, however. The remainder of a proton's mass is due to quantum chromodynamics binding energy, which includes the kinetic energy of the quarks and the energy of the gluon fields that bind the quarks together. Because protons are not fundamental particles, they possess a physical size, though not a definite one; the root mean square charge radius of a proton is about 0.84–0.87 fm or 0.84×10−15 to 0.87×10−15 m.At sufficiently low temperatures, free protons will bind to electrons. However, the character of such bound protons does not change, and they remain protons. A fast proton moving through matter will slow by interactions with electrons and nuclei, until it is captured by the electron cloud of an atom. The result is a protonated atom, which is a chemical compound of hydrogen. In vacuum, when free electrons are present, a sufficiently slow proton may pick up a single free electron, becoming a neutral hydrogen atom, which is chemically a free radical. Such "free hydrogen atoms" tend to react chemically with many other types of atoms at sufficiently low energies. When free hydrogen atoms react with each other, they form neutral hydrogen molecules (H2), which are the most common molecular component of molecular clouds in interstellar space.

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