MIT: No Matter the Size of a Nuclear Party, Some Protons and Neutrons Will Always Pair Up and Dance
November 10, 2020
November 10, 2020
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts, Nov. 10 (TNSRes) -- The Massachusetts Institute of Technology issued the following news:
Atoms in a gas can seem like partiers at a nanoscopic rave, with particles zipping around, pairing up, and flying off again in seemingly random fashion. And yet physicists have come up with formulas that predict this behavior, even when the atoms are extremely close together and can tug and pull on each other in complicated ways.
The environment within the . . .
Atoms in a gas can seem like partiers at a nanoscopic rave, with particles zipping around, pairing up, and flying off again in seemingly random fashion. And yet physicists have come up with formulas that predict this behavior, even when the atoms are extremely close together and can tug and pull on each other in complicated ways.
The environment within the . . .