According to Richard Feynman: "All things are made of atoms- little particles that move around in perpetual moti0on, attracting each other when they are a little disctance appart, but repealing upon being squeezed into one another."
If the atoms have opposite charges (positive to negative) they will attract. If the atoms have the same charges (positive to positive or negative to negative) then they will repel. You can look at the Law of Electric Charges to get more information on this.
A bucky ball is a buckminsterfullerene is a spherical molecule made of 60 carbon atoms that was named after Richard Buckminster Fuller.
No, they can't because their molecules/atoms don't attract to each other, and they can't attach to each other.
atoms
Water is a very abundant natural resource that is vital to and necessary for much of the life on Earth. The chemical properties of water include an oxygen atom that has a positive charge bonded to two hydrogen atoms with negative charges. The hydrogen atoms are "attached" to one side of the oxygen atom, resulting in a water molecule having a positive charge on the side where the hydrogen atoms are and a negative charge on the other side, where the oxygen atom is. Since opposite electrical charges attract, water molecules tend to attract each other, making water kind of "sticky."
Richard Feynman did not discover nanotechnology, but he did give a famous talk in 1959 titled "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" where he discussed the potential for manipulating individual atoms and molecules. This talk is often credited with being one of the influential moments that helped lay the foundation for the development of nanotechnology.
In the Feynman energy lecture, the blocks represent different energy levels that an electron can occupy in an atom. By stacking the blocks, Feynman demonstrates how electrons can move between energy levels and emit photons as they transition from higher to lower energy states. This visualization helps to explain the concept of quantized energy levels in atoms.
The ability of atoms to attract electrons from surrounding atoms is actually called electronegativity. It is a measure of an atom's ability to attract and hold onto electrons. It is a fundamental property that influences chemical reactions and the formation of chemical bonds.
Richard Feynman is considered one of the founding figures of nanotechnology, introducing the concept of manipulating individual atoms and molecules in his famous talk "There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom" in 1959. Other key figures in the development of nanotechnology include Eric Drexler and K. Eric Drexler.
Atoms with the same charge are pushed away from each other. Atoms with different charge attract (unite)
The eleventh Symphony of Science video is 'The Quantum World', exploring the world of quantum mechanics with atoms and their subatomic particles. It features Morgan Freeman, Stephen Hawking, Michio Kaku, Brian Cox, Richard Feynman, and Frank Close. Click on the related link to see this video on Youtube.
negatively
Both have an ability to lose or attract electrons.
Dispersion forces
The element that attracts electrons the most would be Fluorine
If the atoms have opposite charges (positive to negative) they will attract. If the atoms have the same charges (positive to positive or negative to negative) then they will repel. You can look at the Law of Electric Charges to get more information on this.
Not positive