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12 - Inside the Nucleus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2014

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Summary

The next lecture which Mr Tompkins attended was devoted to the interior of the nuclei which make the pivot point for the revolution of atomic electrons.

Ladies and Gentlemen—said the professor—

Digging deeper and deeper into the structure of matter, we will now try to penetrate with our mental eye into the interior of the atomic nucleus, the mysterious region occupying only one thousand billionth part of the total volume of the atom itself. Yet, in spite of the almost incredibly small dimensions of our new field of investigation we shall find it full of very animated activity. In fact, the nucleus is after all the heart of the atom, and, in spite of its relatively small size, contains about 99.97% of total atomic mass.

Entering the nuclear region from the thinly populated electronic atmosphere of the atom, we shall be surprised at once by the extremely overcrowded state of the local population. Whereas electrons of atomic atmosphere move, on the average, distances exceeding by a factor of several hundred thousand their own diameters, the particles living inside the nucleus would literally be rubbing elbows with one another, if only they had elbows. In this sense the picture represented by the nuclear interior is very similar to that of an ordinary liquid, except that instead of molecules we encounter here much smaller and also much more elementary particles known as protons and neutrons.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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