Fallingstar1971":wl89rqwj said:
But.......if protons attract through gravity, why do massive atoms not have electron/nucleus collisions. If the attracting mass increases, but the speed of the inner electrons in orbits one and two stay the same, then gravity should cause the electrons orbit to decay.
To give you an idea of why gravity doesnt play much of a role when you start to think about things that are the size of atoms, check out the relative strenghts of the four forces:
Strong --> 1
Electromagnetic --> 1/137
Weak --> 10^-6 or 0.000001
Gravity --> 10^-39 or 0.000000000000000000000000000000000000001
As you can see, gravity is incrediby weak compared to the strong and electromagnetic forces. Now, check out the relative ranges:
Strong --> 10 ^-15
Electromagnetic --> infinite
Weak --> 10^-18
Gravity --> infinite
You can see just how quickly the strong and weak forces fall off, and how gravity predominates on large scales. But, wait, the EM force is also infinite, so seems like that would predominate over gravity on large scales, right? Well, on large scales, most objects are neutral, so the EM force doesn't come into play here.
The reason you don't really have electron/nucleus collisons is because of quatum mechanics. When you get down on small scales
everything is quantized. The electron can only exist in certain discrete orbits, NOT just any orbit. As a result, any small-scale bound system, such as an atom, will have a ground state, or lowest allowed orbit. The electron will not orbit in any closer than this.
Now that's not to say an eletron and proton will not ever come into contact. In the collapse of a neutron star, electrons and protons are essentially squeezed into each other to create neutrons. But this is an extreme environment.
Fallingstar1971":wl89rqwj said:
Could electrons just exist free in space? In other words, If I stick 8 protons and 8 neutrons together, will they attract 8 electrons automatically to create Oxygen? Is there a way to test this? Or are there examples in nature?
Yeah, the oxygen atom can exist with anywhere between 0 and 8 electrons. These are just different states of ionization of the oxygen atom. The hotter the temperature, the more likely an atom may be ionized to some extent. Cool things down and let an electron pass by and it will fall into an orbit on that atom. Heat things up again and it may get torn off.
A neat example of free electrons and ionization is the re-entry of space vehicles like the shuttle. You know that "blackout" period they have? This is because, during reentry, the vehicle is coming in so fast and experiencing so much friciton with the atmosphere, that it heats it up to an extent that it actually ionizes the "air" around it. All the free electrons created during this period carry a negative charge and interfere with EM communications.
Ultimately, all the four forces really are the same force. They only seem different to us because of the low energy regime we live in. If you plot the coupling constants of the forces versus temperature/energy they appear to merge at extremely high energy regimes like the early Universe.