via chandra.harvard.edu |
What we perceive as painfully solid when we bump against a rock is really a hurly-burly of electrons moving through empty space so fast that we can’t see—or feel—the emptiness. What would matter look like if it weren’t empty, if we could crush the electron cloud down to the size of the nucleus? Suppose we could generate a force strong enough to crush all the emptiness out of a rock roughly the size of a football stadium. The rock would be squeezed down to the size of a grain of sand and would still weigh 4 million tons!
Such extreme forces occur in nature when the central part of a massive star collapses to form a neutron star. The atoms are crushed completely, and the electrons are jammed inside the protons to form a star composed almost entirely of neutrons. The result is a tiny star that is like a gigantic nucleus and has no empty space.