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by dredmorbius
698 days ago
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I've seen similar suggestions, but it's ... probably not an especially useful conceptualisation. The conceptualisation of elements is useful to us because physical characteristics of atoms are (mostly) stable over time, with atoms having distinctive masses, atomic numbers, and most importantly, electron shells. The latter account for most of what we consider to be "chemistry", along with some other effects, most notably the van der Waals force. Neutron stars ... lack most of this. They're in constant flux, they (probably) don't have stable masses (if only due to constant accretion) or atomic numbers, they probably don't have anything resembling an electron shell, and in interactions with other objects any electromagnetic forces would probably be overwhelmed by gravity or, say, spin-induced magnetism. If a measure of a concept or model's usefulness is how much it explains behaviours, "neutron-star-as-element" doesn't buy you much. Though there's possibly some truth or conceptual validity to it. |
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