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Any thoughts?
We also have to ask, what did happen to the neutrons? By all rights they can't just disappear without leaving something else behind. If they were suddenly converted into energy then we have a catastrophic event before we even to begin to worry about unstable nuclei that may be left behind.
Everything would be hydrogen-1
Quote from: jeffreyH on 03/06/2021 02:24:15Everything would be hydrogen-1Do you mean hydride ions or what?If so, why?
So the only thing left is hydrogen, in molecular form.
hydrogen-1
Quote from: jeffreyH on 03/06/2021 13:06:17So the only thing left is hydrogen, in molecular form.So why write this? Quote from: jeffreyH on 03/06/2021 02:24:15hydrogen-1What's the "-1" meant to mean?Unless there's some magic which removes a lot of energy from the system, it's not going to be molecular, but ionised and very hot.
There is a finite probability that a particle will quantum tunnel to a different location.......(etc.)....
What's the "-1" meant to mean?
Tunneling often involves making a measurement of a particle's location
Quote from: Bored chemist on 03/06/2021 13:13:53What's the "-1" meant to mean?Protium. Hydrogen-1 is a perfectly acceptable way of writing that.
Do you mean hydride ions or what?
Quote from: Kryptid on 03/06/2021 16:52:46Quote from: Bored chemist on 03/06/2021 13:13:53What's the "-1" meant to mean?Protium. Hydrogen-1 is a perfectly acceptable way of writing that.Thanks.It's good that someone answered.Odd that it wasn't the guy who I asked twice- the guy who actually wrote it..Quote from: Bored chemist on 03/06/2021 08:27:30Do you mean hydride ions or what?Quote from: Bored chemist on 03/06/2021 13:13:53What's the "-1" meant to mean?
Not really. Tunneling is a passive phenomenon. It is responsible for alpha decay, for example (an alpha particle tunnels out of an unstable nucleus). We don't have to do anything to uranium in order to make it decay. It happens by itself.