deactivate

Meta

Comments

jubiler: this design is quite nice....

bizuteria: Exelent article...

Kathy, diplomas teacher: Despite lots of advantages of Linux, I still think that...

Design Company Manager: Let me clarify - we can use Ubuntu instead of...

Nick: Love your aslampHC great job, keep it up :-) Nick...

Lamp: Haha. Yeah, I'm with you there... The gum kinda tied...

movie fan: there were some awkward moments in this movie that were...

Svetainiu kurimas: theme was inspired by Derek Punsalan’s is.derekpunsalan.com, and evolved from...

Miley-Cyrus-Fan: Thank you so much, usefull +1...

Adult Ühler: I'm a moderately recent windows to Ubuntu convert too. After...

RSS Subscribe via RSS or e-mail and be notified of new stuff automatically.
Enter your email address:

Grid-System of our world

Atoms are really small. Dur, and within those really small atoms are even smaller particles, neutrons, electrons, and protons. Compared to each other and the size of an atom, the atom itself is about the size of Hawaii, where a neutron/proton is the size of a house, and an electron is the size of a grain of sand. So overall the atom consists of mostly empty space. When the atoms collide into each other, why don’t they just go thru each other? This can be answer by a nuculear gridsystem, in which all the particles are aranged onto a grid, where nothing can travel in between the points on that system. This also explains why light doesn’t go thru solid matter. Now, the particles are different sizes than each other, neutron/proton being roughly 1800 times more massive than an electron. I can’t really explain that, but you’ll just have to trust me, it’s all relative, and all particles, when they are that small, look the same.

Information


Author: Lamp
Posted: December 22, 2006
Time: 8:25:41 pm
Trackback URL


Tags


, ,

    2 Responses

Reply to this entry