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Originally posted by jumpspace
gfad:
Originally posted by gfad
Magnetic fields attracting is a different thing to opposite charges attracting.
Hmmm...
Are you saying that a charge hasn't got a magnetic field?
Cheers
JS
...you are correct in theory, as interestingly enough, they are one and the same thing
Originally posted by jumpspace
Has anyone actually worked out what binds the protons together in the nucleas?
Theoretically, they should repell each other but they don't.
Originally posted by gfad
Originally posted by jumpspace
Has anyone actually worked out what binds the protons together in the nucleas?
Theoretically, they should repell each other but they don't.
Yeah they have ... the protons are held together by the Strong Force, one of the four fundamental forces. The strong force is very strong (as the name suggests) to overcome the repulsion between the charged molecules but its strength falls off very quickly so only acts on distances of the order of an atomic nucleus.
If you want to get deeper into it I think its commonly believed that actually the strong force doesnt act upon protons but on the quarks that make up the protons by gluon exchange.
Originally posted by jumpspace
I know this isn't a scientific publication and I can't make the claim and I don't even know if a claim has been made, but I reckon it's an inter-dimensional "anomoly" that's in the middle of the atom that's causing this Strong Force.
...so if anyone gets a Nobel Prize for this "revelation" in years to come, you can tell your grandkids that jumpspace was the one who really should have got the Nobel prize