Main Board • cheap real jordans Store - CheapJordansStock |
01.03.2017, 12:08 - anyoshoes - Rank 6 - 1072 Posts
, cheap air jordans Citations L. P. Gaffney et al. Studies of pear-shaped nuclei using accelerated radioactive beams. Nature. May 9, cheap jordan shoes , 2013. doi: 10.1038/nature12073. [Go to] Further Reading T. Siegfried. Atomic anatomy. Science News. Vol. 179, May 7, 2011, p. 30. [Go to] A. Grant. Proton’s radius revised downward. Vol. 183, cheap jordans online , February 23, 2013, p. 8. [Go to] Atomic nuclei come in many shapes and sizes, and scientists have now obtained precise measurements of an elusive form: pear-shaped. Studying these exotic nuclei, which are described in the May 9 Nature, could allow physicists to better understand subatomic structure and to find new particles and forces, cheap retro jordans . “It’s a beautiful, clear-cut result of a very careful experiment,” says Christopher Lister, cheap real jordans , a physicist at the University of Massachusetts in Lowell. Diagrams in middle school textbooks depict atomic nuclei as spherical, cheap wholesale jordans , but the real story is a lot more complex. Protons and neutrons are jam-packed into a space just 10-15 meters wide, cheap jordans free shipping , held together by a crushing force that dwarfs that of gravity. At the same time, cheap jordans , the subatomic particles constantly move, shifting around and sometimes warping the nucleus into the shape of a football or even a flattened disk. http://www13.plala.or....ite_roots/gwbbs/gwbbs.cgi http://www.clanto.aaf....hread.php?thread_id=20125 http://users.atw.hu/fi...rum_topic&topic=11315 |