The Sun Magnetic Fields Optional: Quantum Physics -------------------------- our Galactic Center of Atoms and Nuclei |
Nuclear Physics
Gradually the picture became clearer. Atoms were found to consist of heavy nuclei, consisting of electrically positive protons and uncharged neutrons, while around the nuclei swarmed lightweight electrons, with a negative electric charge. An electron has about 1/1840 the mass of the proton, which is also the nucleus of hydrogen.
- [Please excuse the recitation of dry facts, but to explain how all this was established would be asking too much from such a brief review. A few of the benchmarks in the discovery of atoms and nuclei are listed here.]
Electrons and nuclei were kept together by electric attraction (negative attracts positive). Furthermore, electrons were sometimes shared by neighboring atoms or transferred to them (by processes of quantum physics), and this link between atoms gave our world its many chemical compounds.
But something else was needed to hold nuclei together, since all protons carried positive charges and repelled each other. Electric forces are definitely not the glue that holds nuclei together, they act in the wrong direction! Besides, binding neutrons to nuclei clearly requires a non-electrical attraction.
All that suggested a different kind of force, a nuclear force, was holding nuclei together. That force had to be stronger than the electric repulsion at short distances, but weaker far away, or else different nuclei might have tended to clump together, too. In other words, it had to be a short-range force, like the force between two small magnets--very hard to separate when stuck together, but once pulled a short distance apart, the force between them drops almost to zero (please do not take this analogy too literally!).
Actually two kinds of force are active in the nucleus, known simply as the "strong force" and the "weak force," or more commonly the "strong interaction" and the "weak interaction" (because their main effect is in converting and creating particles). The weak interaction also affects electrons and other particles, but in the nucleus its main role is to maintain a balance between protons and neutrons, which except for their electric charge are very similar particles (diferent kinds of "nucleons"). Nuclear structure (in light nuclei, at least) favors nuclei containing equal numbers of protons and neutrons, and although moderate inequalities can also exist (in "isotopes"), when they get too big, the weak interaction can convert nucleons of one kind to the other, emitting an electron (or a positron, its positive counterpart) in the process. That is known as beta radioactivity and will not be discussed any further. The strong nuclear force (the only nuclear force considered from here on) can bind protons and neutrons into bigger nuclei. Being positively charged, all these nuclei repel each other, and therefore, except in the presence of extreme temperatures and pressures--such as exist in the core of the Sun--two different nuclei are not likely to combine into one. Their electric repulsion does not allow them to get close enough for the nuclear force to take over.
My candle burns at both ends;
It will not last the night;
But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends
It gives a lovely light!
Stars several times the size of our Sun have enough gravity to crush together not just atoms but even nuclei, compressing all their matter to a sphere perhaps 15 kilometers across. After their collapse they become "neutron stars" consisting only of neutrons (the protons all switching form), giant nuclei as dense as the ones in atoms. A huge amount of energy is liberated in that final collapse which is quite rapid, blowing off the top layers of the collapsing star and also producing elements heavier than iron.
As for the "supernova remnant" left over from the collapse, its fate depends on its mass. If the star was not too massive, the remnant (as explained) is a neutron star. It that star originally rotated around its axis, that rotation is enormously speeded up; the remnant of the supernova of the year 1054 (its ejected cloud, the "Crab Nebula," is shown on the left) is spinning at about 30 revolutions per second! Any magnetic field of the original star is also enormously amplified, and associated phenomena can make it beam radio waves. Pulsars, pulsed radio sources with remarkably stable pulsation periods, are produced that way. By the way, the Crab Nebula is still expanding;