There's a Giant Mystery Hiding Inside Every Atom in the Universe

By Rafi Letzter - Staff Writer
No one really knows what happens inside an atom. But two competing groups
of scientists think they've figured it out. And both are racing to prove
that their own vision is correct.

Here's what we know for sure: Electrons whiz around "orbitals" in an atom's
outer shell. Then there's a whole lot of empty space. And then, right in
the center of that space, there's a tiny nucleus — a dense knot of protons
and neutrons that give the atom most of its mass. Those protons and
neutrons cluster together, bound by what's called the strong force. And the
numbers of those protons and neutrons determine whether the atom is iron or
oxygen or xenon, and whether it's radioactive or stable.

Still, no one knows how those protons and neutrons (together known as
nucleons) behave inside an atom. Outside an atom, protons and neutrons have
definite sizes and shapes. Each of them is made up of three smaller
particles called quarks, and the interactions between those quarks are so
intense that no external force should be able to deform them, not even the
powerful forces between particles in a nucleus. But for decades,
researchers have known that the theory is in some way wrong. Experiments
have shown that, inside a nucleus, protons and neutrons appear much larger
than they should be. Physicists have developed two competing theories that
try to explain that weird mismatch, and the proponents of each are quite
certain the other is incorrect. Both camps agree, however, that whatever
the correct answer is, it must come from a field beyond their own....

https://www.livescience.com/mystery-of-proton-neutron-behavior-in-nucleus.html?fbclid=IwAR0IlQmBawS5EkgkaXxl9SET0bExL-su9Yt3dETNlsea0G9AfWzLV7-7OHQ

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