0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
That's exactly what I'm getting at, though. You can compress & compress until you get to the quarks. You can't compress quarks as they're fundamental.You see, this is 1 of the things I don't get about Heisenberg's principle. If you could stop the neutrons moving by squeezing them tightly enough together the quarks would still have as much freedom of movement as ever. But you could know both the positions (stationary) and momenta (zero) of the neutrons. So where does HUC stop? At fundamental particles or with composite particles?I only used the marbles as a very simplistic analogy.
How do you propose to measure the position or velocity of a neutron, considering its made up of quarks? You'd probably have to somehow measure some property of the quarks. Therefore, if all the quarks obey the uncertainty principle, shouldn't the neutron position necessarily obey the uncertainty principle?
There are two things I don't understand:1. why you don't ask about a simple atomic nucleus? There's no much difference between nuclear matter and neutron star matter.2. why do you think that neutrons cannot move in a neutron star?
1. A simple atomic nucleus has electron orbits. A neutron in a neutron star doesn't.
2. I don't think that because I don't know. That's why I'm asking this question.
Ok, it has electrons around; so? Protons and neutrons in an atomic nucleus are not more free than neutrons in a neutron star.
Quote from: jpetruccelli on 13/11/2008 18:05:42How do you propose to measure the position or velocity of a neutron, considering its made up of quarks? You'd probably have to somehow measure some property of the quarks. Therefore, if all the quarks obey the uncertainty principle, shouldn't the neutron position necessarily obey the uncertainty principle?I think that depends on how neutrons are thought of. Are they considered entities in their own right, albeit composite entities? Is the quantum wave function of a neutron a function of the combination of the wave functions of the quarks? Or is its wave function independent of the quarks? I don't know enough about QM to answer that. However, I believe that the uncertainty principle only applies if the object is smaller than its wave function; am I correct in that belief?
particles also behave like particles.
The energy involved in getting things closer and closer together just increases without limit.
Quote from: lightarrow on 13/11/2008 20:30:08Ok, it has electrons around; so? Protons and neutrons in an atomic nucleus are not more free than neutrons in a neutron star. That may or may not be. In an atomic nucleus there is not 3×1012 times Earth's gravity pressing them together. And that's just the surface gravity. I don't know what it is near the centre of a neutron star. That's what my question is about - what is the effect on the neutrons of that amount of gravity. Does it squeeze them together in such a way that their position & momentum could be known simultaneously? I don't see that talking about hydrogen atoms or neutrons in an atom addresses that question.