The force is strong in neutron stars (MIT)
Jennifer Chu | MIT News Office
February 26, 2020
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Most ordinary matter is held together by an invisible subatomic glue known as the strong nuclear force one of the four fundamental forces in nature, along with gravity, electromagnetism, and the weak force. The strong nuclear force is responsible for the push and pull between protons and neutrons in an atoms nucleus, which keeps an atom from collapsing in on itself.
In atomic nuclei, most protons and neutrons are far enough apart that physicists can accurately predict their interactions. However, these predictions are challenged when the subatomic particles are so close as to be practically on top of each other.
While such ultrashort-distance interactions are rare in most matter on Earth, they define the cores of neutron stars and other extremely dense astrophysical objects. Since scientists first began exploring nuclear physics, they have struggled to explain how the strong nuclear force plays out at such ultrashort distances.
Now physicists at MIT and elsewhere have for the first time characterized the strong nuclear force, and the interactions between protons and neutrons, at extremely short distances.
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Hen and his colleagues have published their results today in the journal Nature. His co-authors include first author Axel Schmidt PhD 16, a former graduate student and postdoc, along with graduate student Jackson Pybus, undergraduate student Adin Hrnjic and additional colleagues from MIT, the Hebrew University, Tel-Aviv University, Old Dominion University, and members of the CLAS Collaboration, a multi-institutional group of scientists involved with the CEBAF Large Accelerator Spectrometer (CLAS), a particle accelerator at Jefferson Laboratory in Newport News, Virginia.
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more:
http://news.mit.edu/2020/force-strong-neutron-stars-0226
article behind paywall:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2021-6
I had no idea there was such a thing as the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility.