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I take it that the number of the stars in the cosmos is infinite?
2) Is neutronium so heavy and dense that there is virtually no space between subparticles (in its atoms or molecules?)?
I take it from what you are saying that the strong force is repulsive at very short ranges?
I had assumed( naively ) that a neutron star was one big "macro" neutron. Also, if there is a lot of proton matter at the centre there must be a collection of electron somewhere.
...I take it from what you (Halc) are saying that the strong force is repulsive at very short ranges?
How dense is neutronium?
Neutron star material is remarkably dense: a normal-sized matchbox containing neutron-star material would have a weight of approximately 3 billion tonnes, the same weight as a 0.5 cubic kilometre chunk of the Earth (a cube with edges of about 800 metres) from Earth's surface
how many stars are in the Milky Way?
It is estimated to contain 100–400 billion stars and at least that number of planets
But no fundamental particle has a meaningful volume
so there is in theory no limit to how far it can be compressed given enough pressure
otherwise heavily positively charged star.
There is space between the particles, held at distance by the nuclear strong force which is strong enough to resist the pressure due to the gravity.
If the electrons could get to the protons, they'd likely be turned into neutrons as had occurred to most of the proton/electron matter, but the picture below has electrons quite deep where the protons are, so go figure.
There is another limit: If the total mass of the neutron star exceeds about 2.5 times the mass of the Sun (in a ball only 10km across!), it is thought that even the Strong Nuclear Force will not be able to withstand the pressure, and it will collapse into a black hole.
its a scifi story so it can exist.
I don't know if there is such a thing as cold nuetronium
If the story is based on existing science then Neutron star material probably needs the extreme gravity conditions of a Neutron star to retain the properties of Neutron star material.
I haven't done the experiment but we can assume that if you removed it from a Neutron star then it expands, interacts with other particles etc.
There you go you can't have it in your story because you want to base it on fact - no human could get or handle it in anyway so that ruins the neutronion part of your story. The star does not create the dencity the colapsing magnetic field did it when the star colapsed.The idea that if you took a sliver away it would become less dence and go back to its regular state is complately wrong.