A magic number in nuclear physics means the number of nucleons (neutrons and protons) that can form a complete shell within the nucleus. Its very similar in concept to the electron shell configurations that form noble gases. As of 2007, the currently accepted list is 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82, and 126, for the nucleus. For the electron shell, the current list is 2, 10, 18, 36, 54, and 86.
Some nuclides are double-magic, in that the number of protons and neutrons are both magic, such as helium-4, oxygen-16, calcium-40, calcium-48, nickel-48, and lead-208. These are particularly stable. Amongst the unstable nuclides, tin-100, and tin-132, along with the recent (2006) discovery of hassium-270, seem to represent endpoints of the stability chain.
Magic numbers in nuclear physics refer to specific numbers of protons or neutrons that result in increased stability of atomic nuclei. These magic numbers play a crucial role in determining the properties and behavior of atomic nuclei, such as their binding energy and nuclear structure. They help explain why certain elements are more stable than others and are important for understanding nuclear reactions and the stability of isotopes.
In Magic Pen, players draw shapes to move a red ball to a flag. The ball is affected by gravity and friction, making drawing techniques crucial for success. There are multiple ways to solve each level, encouraging creativity and problem-solving skills.
Levitation with magic is not possible as it defies the laws of physics. However, illusions and tricks can create the appearance of levitation through the use of hidden supports, mirrors, or other mechanisms.
As of now, there is no scientific evidence to support the existence of magic in reality. Magic, as commonly depicted in fiction, involves supernatural forces and abilities that are not currently understood or possible within the laws of physics. While advancements in technology may bring about seemingly magical abilities in the future, they would likely be based on scientific principles rather than true magic.
A scientist would say nothing. Physics is what made and created the universe and controls it. Myself and other people like me would say magic. This is a much disputed argument. For the first is that physics itself could break it's own laws. Someone could also argue magic is a form of physics. Sadly the real answer is no one actually knows.
Magic numbers in nuclear physics refer to specific numbers of protons or neutrons that result in increased stability of atomic nuclei. These magic numbers play a crucial role in determining the properties and behavior of atomic nuclei, such as their binding energy and nuclear structure. They help explain why certain elements are more stable than others and are important for understanding nuclear reactions and the stability of isotopes.
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Kay Richards has written: 'Sharks' 'Science magic with physics' -- subject(s): Experiments, Juvenile literature, Physics 'Science magic with physics' -- subject(s): Scientific recreations, Experiments, Physics
That every effect has a cause. There is no magic.
They are considered magical because historically, when the elements at these atomic numbers were observed, they seemed to have extraordinary stability than what the usual binding energy curve showed. If you are asking about the word "magic", it was a term coined by Wigner because he found this idea of shells too amazing but true.
Magic
The Magic Flute's Second Part was created in 1798.
The magic number is 2.
The Magic Numbers was created in 2002.
You can get the magic total by squaring the number, adding 1, multiplying by the number, then dividing by 2.
Earvin "Magic" Johnson
Study a lot, read a lot, do lots of exercises. There is no magic shortcut to this.