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geoff asked the Naked Scientists:why don't atoms melt? How can they stand the high temperatures in exploding stars? Yes, they combine to form new atoms, but why don't they melt?What do you think?
I think you may have hit the button at what point does an atom literally vibrate so much that it shakes itself to nothingness at that point could it be said to have melted ? It would just vaporise into nothing perhaps ?
Quote from: geoff on 15/01/2009 22:44:03I think you may have hit the button at what point does an atom literally vibrate so much that it shakes itself to nothingness at that point could it be said to have melted ? It would just vaporise into nothing perhaps ?An atom of a gas, that is a free atom, vibrate around which point?
Quote from: lightarrow on 16/01/2009 18:03:08An atom of a gas, that is a free atom, vibrate around which point?LightarrowDo you see vibration as being a 'force' shaking a single atom uniformly?
An atom of a gas, that is a free atom, vibrate around which point?
Or as something 'dissolving' it from all 'points' by vibrations?If there only was one atom?
In a gas the molecules consisting of atoms will move faster and faster until the atoms all become 'free', as I see it.Would you agree to that?
And let us say that even when they are 'free' they still will receive energy from some 'cosmic happening'
Will then the electron cloud be what is responsible for the atoms breakdown.Steered by the electromagnetic force.
But inside that we have the nucleus, governed by the weak and the strong force.Will the nucleus vibrate too?
I 'think Ill start with this "As for atomic vibrations, I have posited that heat is the manifestation of the outermost electrons' vibrations, which is microkinetic energy that might be called also "micromomentum."
I'm not sure how you see "Vibration means periodic motion around a point."? like a stone thrown into a pond with the vibrations moving as waves?Anyway, that was one of the things I was curious on:)
Lightarrow, "molecular thermal decomposition into atoms"?Does that mean a chemical reaction of a gas 'unbounding' molecules into atoms by heat?
I was thinking of it in terms of kinetic reactions when heated molecules collided, splitting them into their constituents (Atoms).But both descriptions seems to fit to me?
Why do you do this to me Lightarrow?Just when I started to get a grip on it )
What does this mean?"4. A single atom's temperature doesn't exist because it cannot be defined."Then it shouldn't be able 'break down' either, should it?
Are you saying that only a 'quark gluon soup' will 'break down' atoms.And that photons can't do that to a single atom.
As for number five. I thought that the kinetic force was transfered from atom to atom via their electron-clouds, ah, possibly so that is, maybe, or perhaps, maybe not?
I saw it as particles when described as a gas:)But in my question about photons and a single atom I'm not sure how to see it?
I wrote "Are you saying that only a 'quark gluon soup' will 'break down' atoms.And that photons can't do that to a single atom."Well, I was wondering in what way radiation (photons) might 'break down' a atom.shouldn't it be able to?
I understand what you say about temperature being a statistical concept .But as soon we have photons interacting with a atom it will be a 'real' concept again, right?Am I right in assuming that this reasoning goes back to that nothing can be seen as having any values without having any 'interaction' and subsequent, or, 'observation'.So one could then say that first there are something called 'interaction' which then c(w)ould be anything happening between two frames of reference in spacetime.And most importantly, with or without anyone observing. Would that then fulfill the 'statistical demand'?Then we have the 'Observer' who at times (all times?) seems to interact with what (s)he is 'observing'.That makes two different definitions for an interaction, doesn't it?The first one would be 'objective' in that it doesn't need any 'observation' to do 'its thing/interact'The other one, if there is any truth to 'observing' changes the outcome of a experiment, would then be a highly subjective matter.In the first case HUP shouldn't be a problem. That is, if we don't define 'interactions' themselves as 'observers'. Do we?In the second case though, HUP is well and breathing:)That is if you define HUP otherwise than , observed or unobserved always seen as valid.If I choose to see HUP as valid, only, when observing. But then, it seems to me that 'time' can bear no influence on us changing that experiment by 'observing'.As we could allow an 'outcome' (experimenting) but still wait a year before 'observing' that outcome.Which should mean that our 'observing' would be valid as having effects 'outside/freed' of times arrow?As our 'observation' then would 'fall out' as an specified outcome first one year later.Also it is so that all observations made follows lights speed We are always observing already 'done' phenomena.How can that be?If we by observing change them.I wasn't specifically thinking of a plasma Lightarrow when I wrote this, but you are correct that a plasma transfers/creates heat via particle collisions in a ionized gas.My thinking was that every 'vibration' between atoms, no matter:) in what state they might be (as long as they still are atoms), have to have a velocity.Even if that 'force' (particles/photons/waves) propagating, seen geometrically, might be 'crescent shaped' and so spread out in several directions when propagating I thought you could treat each interaction of it with another atom as a single photon/electron/? with a decided velocity, interacting with the electron cloud firstly.But that would hinge on, for example, if photons propagating in space time.If they are more of 'probabilities' then I'm not sure why they need a 'motion' at all.Then it seems more to hinge on what the 'weakest' points of an atom might be?If you see how i mean here:)