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  2. Nuclear force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_force

    Protons and neutrons are therefore viewed as the same particle, but with different isospin quantum numbers; conventionally, the proton is isospin up, while the neutron is isospin down. The strong force is invariant under SU(2) isospin transformations, just as other interactions between particles are invariant under SU(2) transformations of ...

  3. Proton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proton

    Protons and neutrons are both nucleons, which may be bound together by the nuclear force to form atomic nuclei. The nucleus of the most common isotope of the hydrogen atom (with the chemical symbol "H") is a lone proton.

  4. Mirror nuclei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_nuclei

    Since the strong interaction is invariant to protons and neutrons one can expect these mirror nuclei to have very similar binding energies. [1] [2] In 2020 strontium-73 and bromine-73 were found to not behave as expected. [3] The ground state of 73 35 Br has spin and parity 1/2−, whereas the ground state of 73 38 Sr

  5. Nuclear structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_structure

    The liquid drop model is one of the first models of nuclear structure, proposed by Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker in 1935. [5] It describes the nucleus as a semiclassical fluid made up of neutrons and protons, with an internal repulsive electrostatic force proportional to the number of protons.

  6. Neutron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron

    The neutrons and protons in a nucleus form a quantum mechanical system according to the nuclear shell model. Protons and neutrons of a nuclide are organized into discrete hierarchical energy levels with unique quantum numbers. Nucleon decay within a nucleus can occur if allowed by basic energy conservation and quantum mechanical constraints.

  7. Nuclear matter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_matter

    A common idealization is symmetric nuclear matter, which consists of equal numbers of protons and neutrons, with no electrons. When nuclear matter is compressed to sufficiently high density, it is expected, on the basis of the asymptotic freedom of quantum chromodynamics, that it will become quark matter, which is a degenerate Fermi gas of ...

  8. Atomic nucleus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_nucleus

    Protons define the entire charge of a nucleus, and hence its chemical identity. Neutrons are electrically neutral, but contribute to the mass of a nucleus to nearly the same extent as the protons. Neutrons can explain the phenomenon of isotopes (same atomic number with different atomic mass). The main role of neutrons is to reduce electrostatic ...

  9. Nuclear shell model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_shell_model

    The same is true for neutrons. All protons in the same level (n) have the same parity (either +1 or −1), and since the parity of a pair of particles is the product of their parities, an even number of protons from the same level (n) will have +1 parity. Thus, the total angular momentum of the eight protons and the first eight neutrons is zero ...