Originally posted by LURCH
While we're on the subject, how do the electrons get integrated into the nuclei in a neutron star? The force of gravity appearently overcomes the resistance of the electron to occupy an orbital that is lower than the ground state...
Somebody might ask Labguy, he knows the nuclear reactions involved in collapse of cores
Maybe one need not necessarily imagine, as you are doing, the electrons belonging to a certain nucleus being forced down into that individual nucleus
Perhaps one could imagine iron-sized nuclei being forced to fuse into nuclei of heavier elements and even into larger assemblages that one would not ordinarily call nuclei since they wouldn't have a stable existence normally
the merger of irons or anything heavier than iron is endothermic
(iron being the extremum of the curve of binding energy)
I'm not sure how the electrons get gobbled up or annihilated---Labguy would know at once, and there must be plenty on the web.
I believe that in the collapse of a dead star the core reactions are endothermic which is a key to the suddenness of the collapse. The fusion of iron to heavier stuff does not produce heat energy to fight the collapse, so once collapse starts nothing resists it
My hunch is that there are many reactions and some involve gobbling electrons while others involve emitting positrons---as the assemblages of baryons accumulate into pure neutron matter
either way the electrons get wiped out---either gobbled for breakfast or annihilated at brunchtime by the positrons. A huge storm of neutrinos is produced which is observed with SNe.
I realize I haven't answered your question but may hopefully have provided some grist for the mill, if I am mistaken let me know