Originally posted by lethe
i don t believe this. are you sure? if i found a selectron, let's suppose its stable and has the same mass and charge as the electron, only its a boson, could i not put it in the 1s orbital around a proton? what would cause it to spiral in?
doesn t this system still follow Schrödinger's equation? doesn't Schrödinger's equation have a lowest energy level solution for the hydrogen atom? the particle cannot go to a lower en energy level, completely independently of whether the particle is a boson or a fermion, it seems to me.
am i missing something here?
or, look at it another way, the bosons obey the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, right? so they plunge into the nucleus, but they can t stay there, and they won't be anihilated, so they come out again.
in fact, this is the same layman's argument for how Quantum Mechanics restored the stability of the unstable classical atom. i don t see how the fermionic or bosonic nature of the electron has any bearing on this argument.