No, the strong nuclear force does.
Not in any meaningful way.
An atom's nucleus sits at the center and holds the atom's protons and neutrons. The protons and neutrons are themselves made of quarks (which make the protons and neutrons) and gluons (which hold the quarks together).
A nucleus contain protons and neutrons. A nucleus can hold more protons - the number is equal to atomic number.
The positive part of the nucleus is the protons, which have a positive charge. Protons are located within the nucleus of an atom, along with neutrons. The positive charge of the protons helps hold the nucleus together through electromagnetic forces.
Protons are located in the nucleus of an atom, along with neutrons. They have a positive charge, which helps hold the nucleus together due to electromagnetic forces. Electrons, which have a negative charge, orbit the nucleus in specific energy levels.
well they aren't going to orbit if they have no charge. They hold the protons together. Protons, with the same charge, wouldn't stay together without neutrons.
The energy used to hold the nucleus together
The strong nuclear force is the fundamental force that holds the nucleus together by overcoming the electromagnetic force that causes protons to repel each other. This force acts over very short distances within the nucleus and is responsible for binding protons and neutrons together to form the atomic nucleus.
The electrical forces inside a nucleus contribute to the nuclear force, also known as the strong nuclear force. This force is responsible for binding protons and neutrons together in the nucleus. It overcomes the electrical repulsion between positively charged protons to hold the nucleus together.
The Strong nuclear force is what holds the protons and neutrons together in an atoms nucleus. Think of a gorilla with an atom of two protons and two neutrons together and his hands holding the atoms together.
Mesons hold protons and neutrons together by mediating the strong nuclear force between them. This force is carried by the exchange of mesons between quarks inside the protons and neutrons. The strong nuclear force is responsible for binding protons and neutrons together in the atomic nucleus.
Yes, the strong force carried by meson exchanges between protons and/or neutrons.