That would be the "strong nuclear force".
photons carry the electromagnetic force that holds electrons to the nucleus.mesons carry the strong force that holds protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.W & Z bosons carry the weak force that holds protons and neutrons together in the nucleus and mediate beta decay processes.quarks are inside the protons and neutrons.gluons carry the strong force that holds quarks together inside protons and neutrons.
It is called the Strong Force, specifically the ResidualStrong Force. The Fundamental Strong Force is what holds quarks (which make up Protons and Neutrons) together. The Residual Strong Force is mediated by virtual mesons and has an effective range of 10^(-15) Meters and gets significatly weaker beyond this point. This is the diameter of a Lead atom's nucleus- any bigger and it will become unstable, which is why all elements greater than this are radioactive.
No. Not under normal conditions. It is true that protons within the nucleus attract each other due to the residual binding energy left over from the binding energy that holds quarks together to form protons and neutrons, but that force does not extend beyond the nucleus before the electromagnetic force, a repulsive force, would override the residual binding energy. In order to bind protons from different nuclei together, more formally, different nuclei together, you need nuclear fusion, and that requires high temperature and high pressure, first to ionize the atom and strip away the electron shells, and second to bring the nuclei close enough together that the residual binding energy can overcome the electromagnetic force.
Electrons produce a magnetic force that holds earth together and trees
Gravity is an example of gravity. Light is an example of the electromagnetic force.The other two are a lot trickier, because they act only over very short distances and there aren't really good everyday examples of them.The weak force is the cause of certain kinds of radioactive decay.The color force is what holds hadrons together, which is even more esoteric.
The nucleus holds both neutrons and electrons in it.
The strong atomic force holds protons (and neutrons) together in the nucleus.
The residual strong force. The strong force (or color force) is what holds quarks together to form protons and neutrons. The residual strong force then holds the protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.
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).
"strong nuclear force"
The force that holds protons and neutrons together in an atomic nucleus is called the strong nuclear force.
The strong nuclear force holds together protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom. It is one of the fundamental forces in nature that overcomes the electromagnetic repulsion between positively charged protons, binding them together in a stable nucleus.
photons carry the electromagnetic force that holds electrons to the nucleus.mesons carry the strong force that holds protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.W & Z bosons carry the weak force that holds protons and neutrons together in the nucleus and mediate beta decay processes.quarks are inside the protons and neutrons.gluons carry the strong force that holds quarks together inside protons and neutrons.
The force between nucleons is called nuclear force.
If you mean the nucleus, than I have the answer. The nucleus is the part of an atom that holds protons and neutrons. (Protons have positive charge, neutrons have no charge.)
The force that holds the nucleus together is the strong nuclear force. This force is mediated by particles called gluons, and it is responsible for binding protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.
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.