<p class="title">Murray Gell-Mann, a physicist who theorized the existence of the quark and won a Nobel Prize for his method of classifying particles, has died at age 89, the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Considered among the most important physicists of the 20th century, the American scientist theorized in the 1960s that subatomic particles -- protons and neutrons -- were composed of paired subunits he called quarks.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Experiments later confirmed the existence of the particles, which are a continuing subject of study by physicists including those at the Large Hadron Collider, the world's most powerful proton smasher straddling the French-Swiss border.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Amid an explosion of research into what makes up a matter in the 1950s and 1960s, Gell-Mann came up with criteria for putting particles in groups of eight based on characteristics like electric charge and spin.</p>.<p class="bodytext">He called it the "eightfold way," Caltech said and was awarded the 1969 Nobel Prize in Physics for the innovation.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Born in New York City on September 15, 1929, Gell-Mann was encouraged to study physics by his father and earned a doctorate in the subject from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1951.</p>.<p class="bodytext">He taught at Caltech in Pasadena, California from 1955 until his retirement in 1993.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"Dr Gell-Mann had this clear vision and penetrating insight to look through the large amounts of data that were coming from experiments and make sense of it," Hirosi Ooguri, a professor at Caltech and director of the school's Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics, said in an obituary published by the university.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"He opened a new paradigm in particle physics."</p>
<p class="title">Murray Gell-Mann, a physicist who theorized the existence of the quark and won a Nobel Prize for his method of classifying particles, has died at age 89, the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Considered among the most important physicists of the 20th century, the American scientist theorized in the 1960s that subatomic particles -- protons and neutrons -- were composed of paired subunits he called quarks.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Experiments later confirmed the existence of the particles, which are a continuing subject of study by physicists including those at the Large Hadron Collider, the world's most powerful proton smasher straddling the French-Swiss border.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Amid an explosion of research into what makes up a matter in the 1950s and 1960s, Gell-Mann came up with criteria for putting particles in groups of eight based on characteristics like electric charge and spin.</p>.<p class="bodytext">He called it the "eightfold way," Caltech said and was awarded the 1969 Nobel Prize in Physics for the innovation.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Born in New York City on September 15, 1929, Gell-Mann was encouraged to study physics by his father and earned a doctorate in the subject from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1951.</p>.<p class="bodytext">He taught at Caltech in Pasadena, California from 1955 until his retirement in 1993.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"Dr Gell-Mann had this clear vision and penetrating insight to look through the large amounts of data that were coming from experiments and make sense of it," Hirosi Ooguri, a professor at Caltech and director of the school's Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics, said in an obituary published by the university.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"He opened a new paradigm in particle physics."</p>