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To: Physicist; Piltdown_Woman; jwh_Denver; longshadow; PatrickHenry; Lonesome in Massachussets; ...
Binding energy" is a negative energy. If the mass of a nucleus were always less than any sum of its potential components, then it would always take energy to split a nucleus. This is true for any nucleus below iron. For nuclei above iron, the binding energy becomes less and less; the strong nuclear force creates stable minima in which very heavy nuclei can exist, but these are but local minima sitting high on the electromagnetic hill. A uranium nucleus is heavier than thorium plus helium.

One Of the interesting things about the curve of binding energy is the elements that are created in stellar processes:

The weak force is the force that induces beta decay via interaction with neutrinos. A star uses the weak force to “burn” (nuclear fusion). Three processes we observe are proton-to proton fusion, helium fusion, and the carbon cycle. Here is an example of proton-to-proton fusion, which is the process our own sun uses: (two protons fuse -> via neutrino interaction one of the protons transmutes to a neutron to form deuterium -> combines with another proton to form a helium nuclei -> two helium nuclei fuse releasing alpha particles and two protons). The weak force is also necessary for the formation of the elements above iron. Due to the curve of binding energy (iron has the most tightly bound nucleus), nuclear forces within a star cannot form any element above iron in the periodic table. So it is believed that all higher elements were formed in the vast energies of supernovae. In this explosion large fluxes of energetic neutrons are produced which produce the heavier elements by nuclei bombardment. This process could not take place without neutrino involvement and the weak force.

96 posted on 06/25/2003 6:27:39 PM PDT by RadioAstronomer
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To: Doctor Stochastic; Junior; Godel
Ping! you would like this thread :-)
97 posted on 06/25/2003 6:50:26 PM PDT by RadioAstronomer
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To: RadioAstronomer; All
So it is believed that all higher elements were formed in the vast energies of supernovae.

And thus, speculation is that our Sun is a third-generation star...because we have heavier elements.

145 posted on 06/25/2003 10:42:46 PM PDT by Aracelis (We are all just so much stardust)
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