- A large distribution of positive charge spread over a relatively large area
With Small negatively charged electrons immersed within the positive distribution
- Both proportional to 1/r²
- Only one kind of mass - so the force is always attractive
- 2 types of charge - therefore electrical charge can be both repulsive and attractive
- Electric force is fundamentally stronger
EPE (Electrical Potential Energy)
5MeV (Mega electronvolts)
Between 0.5-3.0fm(FemtoMetres)
Less than 0.5fm(FemtoMetres)
- Acts on all neutrons
- It's a short range force
- It's max attractive value is around 1fm(Typical nuclear separation
- Forces (repulsive and attractive) cancel out (equal zero) after 3fm
Alpha particles were shot (at a high speed) at a thin gold sheet of foil. Most of them passed through the sheet, showing that the atom is mostly empty space. Some were deflected at small angles showing that the nucleus was +ve charged. A small amount were deflected at large angles showing that the mass of the atom is concentrated at the nucleus.
The atom has a small dense nucleus which held most of the atoms mass. The atom was also surrounded by orbiting e-'s
Atoms with the same number of protons and e-s but a different number of neutrons
10^-14, estimated from the distribution of angles in rutherfords experiment
R = r0(A^1/3)
- Gravitational
- Electromagnetic
- Weak nuclear
- Strong nuclear
- Acts on all particles with mass
- Always attractive
- Has an infinite range, however is the weakest force of all fundamental forces
- Acts on all particles with charge (electrostatic and magnetic)
- Has an infinite range
- Responsible for beta decay
- Changes quark types over very small distances
- Acts between all nucleons and quarks
- Counteracts the repulsve electrostatic forces between protons in the nucleus
- Attractive at small distances(0.5 - 3fm)
- Repulsive at small distances(<0.5fm)
- Has too many neutrons
- Has too many protons
- The nucleon is too heavy
- It has too much energy