Why is it possible to push your finger through butter?

  • Context: High School 
  • Thread starter Thread starter arupel
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Solid
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the question of why it is possible to push a finger through butter, exploring concepts related to atomic structure, intermolecular forces, and the nature of solids and liquids. Participants engage in theoretical explanations and challenge each other's premises.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that the vast amount of space at the atomic level contributes to the ability to push a finger through materials like butter.
  • There is a suggestion that electrical repulsion between electron orbits of atoms in the finger and the table plays a role, though the mechanism remains unclear.
  • Another explanation involves the Pauli exclusion principle, with participants questioning its implications and understanding.
  • One participant argues that the arrangement of electrons in both the finger and the table prevents easy electrostatic interaction, describing the stability of atomic configurations.
  • Some participants assert that intermolecular bonds of materials, such as ionic or covalent bonds, influence the ability to penetrate substances, although this point is contested as being relevant to the original question.
  • There is a debate about whether butter should be classified as a solid, with participants discussing the nature of butter in relation to the question posed.
  • A later reply suggests that moving butter aside is different from pushing a finger through it, indicating a potential misunderstanding of the original question.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the nature of atomic structure, intermolecular forces, and the classification of butter, indicating that the discussion remains unresolved with no clear consensus.

Contextual Notes

Some claims about atomic structure and intermolecular forces are based on simplified models, and there are unresolved questions about definitions and interpretations of solid and liquid states.

arupel
Messages
45
Reaction score
2
Basically the vast amount of space at the atomic level is empty so on that basis of this it should not be that difficult to push your finger through a table.

Primary explanation is that it is electrical repulsion between the electrons orbits of the atoms of my finger to that of the table? How does this work?

Second possible explanation is that it is the Pauli exclusion principle. How does this work?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
arupel said:
Primary explanation is that it is electrical repulsion between the electrons orbits of the atoms of my finger to that of the table? How does this work?

What do you mean when you ask how it works? Go to YouTube and do a search for Feynman magnets. The video clip is about seven and a half minutes long.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: davenn
arupel said:
Second possible explanation is that it is the Pauli exclusion principle. How does this work?
and since you are aware of the Pauli exclusion principle, have you checked out to what it actually says ?

Go and do what @Mister T and I have suggested and come back with any specific question on bits you don't understand :smile:Dave
 
You can also search for PF threads on the subject, where you will see that you basic premise
arupel said:
Basically the vast amount of space at the atomic level is empty
is false.
 
The simple answer is that the arrangement of electrons in your finger cannot easily electro-statically overcome the arrangement of electrons in the table because they are both already in too stable of an atomic configuration. The outer electron shells very much repel one another in a springy fashion and floor atoms hold us up by our foot atoms in this way. I say springy because there is a slight give, which is why a ball bearing bounces on a marble floor.

OTOH, atoms squeezed together with enough force and loosened with heat can interconnect. Coal squeezed into diamonds is an example. Since our fingers are partly carbon, that portion might become diamond under extreme conditions, I suppose. Ouch.

Even if you dip your fingers in water, the partly free atoms of the liquid are too stable for these electron shells to give and totally mix with the electron shells of your finger. The intact atoms of liquids or gases like air, both fluids and loosely coherent under normal temperature and pressure, merely part enough to allow the stable solid atomic configuration of your finger to pass by the liquid atoms.

Wes
 
DrClaude said:
You can also search for PF threads on the subject, where you will see that you basic premise

is false.
I have a feeling that your reply could over - simplified. The Rutherford alphascattering results suggest that it is not "false' - if you interpret the results as they were originally interpreted - that there is a lot of 'empty' space, or at least very low density stuff in the gaps between the nuclei of atoms of a solid. But I agree that simplified, mechanical models of the atomic level can be misleading.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: DrClaude
It has to do of how strong intermolecular bonds of a material are.For example NaCl intermolecular bonds are very strong(they are ionic) and that's why NaCl has a high melting point.H20 bonds are covalent but polar so they are quite strong to be broken.O2 bonds are covalent and non-polar so they are easily broken.
 
CaptainMarvel1899 said:
It has to do of how strong intermolecular bonds of a material are.For example NaCl intermolecular bonds are very strong(they are ionic) and that's why NaCl has a high melting point.H20 bonds are covalent but polar so they are quite strong to be broken.O2 bonds are covalent and non-polar so they are easily broken.
This has nothing to do with the question asked.
 
It has . Thats why some materials are solids in room temperature , some are liquids and some are gases.
 
  • #10
CaptainMarvel1899 said:
It has . Thats why some materials are solids in room temperature , some are liquids and some are gases.
No. The question is about why you can't push your finger through a solid.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: davenn
  • #11
Is butter a solid?
I can push my finger through butter.
 
  • #12
256bits said:
Is butter a solid?
Classification alert! :eek:
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: CaptainMarvel1899
  • #13
Nice one.
 
  • #14
256bits said:
Is butter a solid?
I can push my finger through butter.
From the point of view of the original question, you're not pushing your finger through butter. You are moving the butter aside to make room for your finger.

This thread is getting silly. Thanks to @Wes Tausend for the best answer.

Thread closed.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: berkeman

Similar threads

  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
7K
  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
4K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 5 ·
Replies
5
Views
8K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 30 ·
2
Replies
30
Views
25K
  • · Replies 14 ·
Replies
14
Views
1K
Replies
10
Views
2K
  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
8K