Originally Posted by pedrone
Of course any expert in Nuclear Physics cannot exhibit any equation with Hamiltonian for the nucleus, because such equation does not exist.
They can. It might not be perfect but then neither is one for a many electron atom.
No, they cant.
Atoms with few electrons are very well described.
Unlike, nuclei with few nucleons cannot be accuratelly described.
Atoms with many electrons are not well explained because the complexity of the interactions grows with growth of the quantity of electrons
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And the reason is because there is not one unique model in Nuclear Physics, capable to explain all the nuclear phenomena.
That is true. But its not exactly only nuclear physics that has that problem.








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In Atomic Physics there is one unique model of atom, there is an equation with Hamiltonian, and such model is used to describe all the atomic phenomena.
No there isn't.
Yes, there is.
What I mean to say is that there is a
FUNDAMENTAL STRUCTURE of the atom, with a nucleus in the center, and electrons moving about it according to Pauli's Principle.
There is not a similar
FUNDAMENTAL STRUCTURE of nucleus in Nuclear Physics.
There are several models, which makes obvious that all they are wrong. If one among them should be correct, there would not be the need to consider the other ones.
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In Nuclear Physics there are several models.
The Liquid Drop Model considers that all the nucleons are distributed in a shell. An empirical formula was developed, and it is used to calculate the binding energies.
I think you mean uniformly distributed in a charged sphere.
No, I mean to say just like it is considered: in such model it's supposed the nucleons to behave like happens in a drop of a liquid in which the superficial tensions due to the molecules is similar to the interactions between the nucleons.
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So, the theorists did not discover the real structure of the nucleus.
They use several incompatible models, and each one is used to calculate some nuclear properties.
The theorists have no idea on how the nucleons are distributed within the nucleus.
This last statement is false. We have a wealth of experimental data showing matter and charge distribution in the nucleus.
Then why a hell the theorists, along 50 years, did not find yet a UNIQUE model of nucleus, capable to explain all the nuclear phenomena ?








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So, as they did not discover the fundamental structure of the nucleus (as the fundamental structure of the atom was discovered in Atomic Physics), this is the reason why an equation with Hamiltonian was never developed for the nucleus.
The reason why the Hamiltonians are only approximate is because of the large number of two and three body interactions one has when one considers multi-particle configurations.







Perhaps you enjoy to fool yourself believing it.
I dont enjoy to fool myself
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That's why there are phenomena which cannot explained by considering the existing nuclear models.
Which is why people still do nuclear physics research.
of course...
... by rejecting experiments, like you do with cold fusion, which prove Nuclear Physics to be wrong
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Later we will speak about some of those inexplicable nuclear phenomena
I'll look forward to it.
I'm not sure you will enjoy it


