The strong nuclear force acts on particles within the atomic nucleus, which is typically within a range of about 1 femtometer (10^-15 meters). This force is responsible for binding protons and neutrons together in the nucleus.
The two forces that act only over a very short range are the strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear force. The strong nuclear force binds protons and neutrons together within the nucleus of an atom, while the weak nuclear force is responsible for certain types of radioactive decay.
The range of the electromagnetic and gravitational forces is infinite. The strong nuclear force acts over a very short range of about 10^-15 meters within the atomic nucleus. The weak nuclear force has a range of about 10^-18 meters.
The strong nuclear force binds protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei. It is a short-range force that operates within the nucleus, overcoming the repulsive electromagnetic forces between positively charged protons.
The electric force has a longer range than the strong force. The electric force can act over long distances, such as between charged particles in atoms and molecules, while the strong force is restricted to acting only over very short distances within atomic nuclei.
The strong nuclear force has a very short range, acting over distances comparable to the size of atomic nuclei (around 10^-15 meters), while the other fundamental forces (electromagnetic, weak nuclear, and gravity) have much longer ranges, extending over large distances such as the size of the universe.
The two forces that act only over a very short range are the strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear force. The strong nuclear force binds protons and neutrons together within the nucleus of an atom, while the weak nuclear force is responsible for certain types of radioactive decay.
They are the shortest range of the four forces, unable to act outside the diameter of the atomic nucleus.
The range of the electromagnetic and gravitational forces is infinite. The strong nuclear force acts over a very short range of about 10^-15 meters within the atomic nucleus. The weak nuclear force has a range of about 10^-18 meters.
The strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear force act within the nucleus to hold it together.
The strong nuclear force binds protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei. It is a short-range force that operates within the nucleus, overcoming the repulsive electromagnetic forces between positively charged protons.
The two forces are the strong nuclear force and the electromagnetic force. The strong nuclear force acts to hold the nucleus together by overcoming the repulsive electromagnetic force between positively charged protons. This creates a delicate balance between the attractive strong nuclear force and the repulsive electromagnetic force, resulting in a "nuclear tug of war" within the nucleus.
Mostly the strong force and weak force, these act in/on nucleus.
The four forces are: strong nuclear force, weak nuclear force, electromagnetic force, and gravitational force.Both the strong nuclear force and the weak nuclear force have a very limited range, although very strong compared to the other two forces neither can reach outside the atomic nucleus.The electromagnetic force has an infinite range and can in principle act between all objects all the time, but the fact that it comes in opposite polarities (i.e. plus/minus electric charges, north/south magnetic poles) that attract and cancel each other, most objects have no net electromagnetic field and thus cannot act on any other object.The gravitational force has an infinite range and only one polarity (i.e. attractive), so although it is the weakest of all the four forces, it alone can act between all objects all the time.
electromagnetic - holds electrons to nucleusweak - mediates neutron decay processstrong - holds nucleus togethergravity - has no effectOnly 3 of the 4 forces act to hold atoms together.
The electric force has a longer range than the strong force. The electric force can act over long distances, such as between charged particles in atoms and molecules, while the strong force is restricted to acting only over very short distances within atomic nuclei.
They are the shortest range of the four forces, unable to act outside the diameter of the atomic nucleus.
The strong nuclear force acts only on neutrons and protons in the nucleus of an atom. The opposite would be a weak nuclear force.