SoX wrote:Just thought i'd run this past some of you,,coz it sounds a bit weird. Today i had a chat with a fellow physicist at my college, it went a litte something like dis:
A
fellow physicist? Unless you're a physicist (which I'm seriously doubting based on your posts), please refrain from giving the impression that you are.
An atom is summat like 99% (or whatver close to) space, the bit between the nucleus and electrons.
And since the nucleons are made up of quarks, and these dont "touch" each other, there must be space in the nucleus too.
Actually, we have no way of really confirming that there is empty space between quarks. However, considering that the strong nuclear force is, well, the strongest binding force in the universe (1E40 times stronger than gravity, and this force is
constant within a certain, distinct radius), I'd say it's pretty likely that there isn't any space between quarks.
So since an atom is now pretty damn close to 100% space then does that mean: "we are practically made up of entirely nothing?"
Just about, yeah. The only reason you can touch something without it completely falling apart is by virtue of electromagnetic interaction.
oh, i knew that. that all forces boil down to,, erm 4 is it? (Weak/Strong Nuclear, Gravity and Elctromagnetic) and that nothing touches its just electromagnetic interaction. Its just that if we are 100% nothing, then what is nothing...thats just gettin weird. does nothing exist? (please dont answer that one, i know that we have a number for it i.e. 0).
We're obviously not 100% nothing. We're simply
largely nothing. If you're so miffed at the prospect, consider that if we were packed as densely as we could be, we'd all collapse into our own singularities.
Oh, and that "nothing" is the quantum foam. There's more weird shit that goes on in that stuff.
Queed Salaron wrote:What's even better is this: Because our entire bodies are made up of mostly space, is it then theoretically possible to shove an extremely thin needle through, say, the middle of our chests and never have it interact with an atom in our body? Like, in reference to the Bill Nye analogy, sometimes you can stick your finger in and out of the whirring fanblades really quickly and not hit or get hit by one of the blades.
They're called neutrinos.