The entropy of systems

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20 years 3 months ago #11520 by Jim
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GD, I would guess gravity is a property of the atom-much like mass is a property of the atom. These details are not alike and need to be understood as different things. It is a problem in the current state of the art that none of the details of matter are defined very well. Maybe someday that will change. Understanding your question is missing me.

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20 years 3 months ago #11645 by north
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perhaps i'm out of line here,(simply don't know what i'm talking about)but i have always wondered why the surface(or where the Sun spots appear, are dark(black) within them)what would block the light which is produced from fusion within the Sun from filling this appearent void? it is almost as if the surface is hotter than the core!!

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20 years 3 months ago #11521 by GD
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Jim,

If the atom's potential is dependant on the entropy of the system it is situated in and the number of bonds between atoms affects the amount of free energy in a system, then the quantity of atoms also determines a system's entropy.
One seems to feed the other.

Like a dog running after its tail, the curved path of a colliding particle takes in an atomic accelerator is dictated by the decreasing potential field this particle generates.

Therefore I am suggesting the atom is responsible for gravity.

This is the reason why I am questioning the stability of the atom.
The entropy of the atom is directly linked with the entropy of the system it is situated in.
The position of the atom in a mass or space becomes important.

What do you think ?

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20 years 3 months ago #11481 by GD
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North,

I've read somewhere that the temperature at the center of a nebula after the explosion of a star was cooler than the expanding gas.
Therefore I think this theory is correct.

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20 years 3 months ago #11484 by north
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but the thing is our star(Sun) is not exploding,is it?

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20 years 3 months ago #11485 by north
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Tom

curious,how do you explain the "blackness" phenomena in Sun spots?

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