Chemistry, asked by lekshmirejimon1981, 8 months ago

How
strong nuclear
force depends
Charge? Emplain,


chemistry ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

The strong force has gluons, which are like photons for the electromagnetic force. These particles mediate the strong force, but are also color charged, which makes QCD (quantum chromodynamics) significantly more difficult to deal with than QED.

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Explanation:

The nuclear force (or nucleon–nucleon interaction or residual strong force) is a force that acts between the protons and neutrons of atoms. Neutrons and protons, both nucleons, are affected by the nuclear force almost identically. Since protons have charge +1 e, they experience an electric force that tends to push them apart, but at short range the attractive nuclear force is strong enough to overcome the electromagnetic force. The nuclear force binds nucleons into atomic nuclei.

The nuclear force is powerfully attractive between nucleons at distances of about 1 femtometre (fm, or 1.0 × 10−15 metres), but it rapidly decreases to insignificance at distances beyond about 2.5 fm. At distances less than 0.7 fm, the nuclear force becomes repulsive. This repulsive component is responsible for the physical size of nuclei, since the nucleons can come no closer than the force allows. By comparison, the size of an atom, measured in angstroms (Å, or 1.0 × 10−10 m), is five orders of magnitude larger. The nuclear force is not simple, however, since it depends on the nucleon spins, has a tensor component, and may depend on the relative momentum of the nucleons.

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