By the Pauli exclusion principle, no quantum state can be occupied by more than one fermion with an identical set of quantum numbers.
FC St. Pauli | Archimedes' principle | Wolfgang Pauli | St. Pauli | uncertainty principle | Gunter Pauli | Aufbau principle | The Principle of Evil Made Flesh | Pauli Murray | Chinese Exclusion Act | Bernoulli's principle | An Essay on the Principle of Population | social exclusion | Pauli exclusion principle | Pauli | Pareto principle | Mutual exclusion | Homestead principle | Gustav Pauli | Chinese Exclusion Act (United States) | Chernobyl Exclusion Zone | Bavaria – St. Pauli Brewery | A Man of Principle | Total Exclusion Zone | Superposition principle | Scheimpflug principle | Sabatier principle | Robots exclusion standard | Principle of indifference | Pontryagin's minimum principle |
Historically, shortly after the existence of quarks was first proposed in 1964, Oscar W. Greenberg introduced the notion of color charge to explain how quarks could coexist inside some hadrons in otherwise identical quantum states without violating the Pauli exclusion principle.