| Shin'ichirō Tomonaga - 1997 - 274 pages
...Since he quotes Rutherford's words in his lecture, let me repeat them here. "Under some conditions it may be possible for an electron to combine much more closely with a hydrogen nucleus, forming a kind of neutral doublet. . . Its external field would be practically... | |
| Per F Dahl - 1999 - 420 pages
...exception appeared to be hydrogen, with a mass of 1.008. This anomality suggested to Rutherford that 'it may be possible for an electron to combine much more closely with the H nucleus [than in the ordinary hydrogen atom], forming a kind of neutral doublet' [3-2]; that is, an atom of... | |
| 1998 - 476 pages
...would have peculiar and interesting properties. It may be of interest to quote his remarks: « Under some conditions, however, it may be possible for an...neutral doublet. Such an atom would have very novel properties. Its external field would be practically zero, except very close to the nucleus, and in... | |
| Laura Garwin, Tim Lincoln - 2010 - 382 pages
...distance, and the spectrum of hydrogen is ascribed to the movements of this distant electron. Under some conditions, however, it may be possible for an...neutral doublet. Such an atom would have very novel properties ... it should be able to move freely through matter ... it may be impossible to contain... | |
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