nuby
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What is the maximum atomic weight of a single atom (in theory)? Could there be an element with an atomic number greater than 150, somewhere in the universe? How is it possible?
If you exclude the concept of neutron stars as "giant nuclei", there is a theoretical limit on the mass of an atom, but it is comparatively little known.nuby said:So if the conditions are right then could you say there is no limit on the mass/size of an atom?
Narrow positron peaks are observed in five supercritical collision systems with combined nuclear charge 180<~Zu<~188. The peaks do not originate from nuclear internal pair conversion and their production appears to occur in a narrow projectile-energy interval near the Coulomb barrier. The line shapes are consistent with emission by a source moving with the c.m. velocity. Particularly notable is an apparent independence of the peak energies on Zu. These observations are discussed in the context of the spontaneous decay of the QED vacuum and other new potential sources of line positron spectra.
nuby said:Good information, Thanks. I was also under the impression that the maximum mass number of protons in an atom could be obtained by (2pi/c^3)/proton_mass No?
Can you explain that concept ? I'm not sure what you are talking about.nuby said:the smallest possible 'orbital' radius of hydrogen
nuby said:What about ratios?