Conductors and insulators

The way that atoms bond together affects the electrical properties of the materials they form. For example, in materials held together by the metallic bond, electrons float loosely between the metal ions. These electrons will be free to move if an electrical force is applied. For example, if a copper wire is attached across the poles of a battery, the electrons will flow inside the wire. Thus, an electric current flows, and the copper is said to be a conductor.

The flow of electrons inside a conductor is not quite so simple, though. A free electron will be accelerated for a while but will then collide with an ion. In the collision process, some of the energy acquired by the electron will be transferred to the ion. As a result, the ion will move faster, and an observer will notice the wire’s temperature rise. This conversion of electrical energy from the motion of the electrons to heat energy is called electrical resistance. In a material of high resistance, the wire heats up quickly as electric current flows. In a material of low resistance, such as copper wire, most of the energy remains with the moving electrons, so the material is good at moving electrical energy from one point to another. Its excellent conducting property, together with its relatively low cost, is why copper is commonly used in electrical wiring.

The exact opposite situation obtains in materials, such as plastics and ceramics, in which the electrons are all locked into ionic or covalent bonds. When these kinds of materials are placed between the poles of a battery, no current flows—there are simply no electrons free to move. Such materials are called insulators.

Magnetic properties

The magnetic properties of materials are also related to the behaviour of electrons in atoms. An electron in orbit can be thought of as a miniature loop of electric current. According to the laws of electromagnetism, such a loop will create a magnetic field. Each electron in orbit around a nucleus produces its own magnetic field, and the sum of these fields, together with the intrinsic fields of the electrons and the nucleus, determines the magnetic field of the atom. Unless all of these fields cancel out, the atom can be thought of as a tiny magnet.

In most materials these atomic magnets point in random directions, so that the material itself is not magnetic. In some cases—for instance, when randomly oriented atomic magnets are placed in a strong external magnetic field—they line up, strengthening the external field in the process. This phenomenon is known as paramagnetism. In a few metals, such as iron, the interatomic forces are such that the atomic magnets line up over regions a few thousand atoms across. These regions are called domains. In normal iron the domains are oriented randomly, so the material is not magnetic. If iron is put in a strong magnetic field, however, the domains will line up, and they will stay lined up even after the external field is removed. As a result, the piece of iron will acquire a strong magnetic field. This phenomenon is known as ferromagnetism. Permanent magnets are made in this way.

The nucleus

Nuclear forces

The primary constituents of the nucleus are the proton and the neutron, which have approximately equal mass and are much more massive than the electron. For reference, the accepted mass of the proton is 1.672621777 × 10−24 gram, while that of the neutron is 1.674927351 × 10−24 gram. The charge on the proton is equal in magnitude to that on the electron but is opposite in sign, while the neutron has no electrical charge. Both particles have spin 1/2 and are therefore fermions and subject to the Pauli exclusion principle. Both also have intrinsic magnetic fields. The magnetic moment of the proton is 1.410606743 × 10−26 joule per tesla, while that of the neutron is −0.96623647 × 10−26 joule per tesla.

It would be incorrect to picture the nucleus as just a collection of protons and neutrons, analogous to a bag of marbles. In fact, much of the effort in physics research during the second half of the 20th century was devoted to studying the various kinds of particles that live out their fleeting lives inside the nucleus. A more-accurate picture of the nucleus would be of a seething cauldron where hundreds of different kinds of particles swarm around the protons and neutrons. It is now believed that these so-called elementary particles are made of still more-elementary objects, which have been given the name of quarks. Modern theories suggest that even the quarks may be made of still more-fundamental entities called strings (see string theory).

The forces that operate inside the nucleus are a mixture of those familiar from everyday life and those that operate only inside the atom. Two protons, for example, will repel each other because of their identical electrical force but will be attracted to each other by gravitation. Especially at the scale of elementary particles, the gravitational force is many orders of magnitude weaker than other fundamental forces, so it is customarily ignored when talking about the nucleus. Nevertheless, because the nucleus stays together in spite of the repulsive electrical force between protons, there must exist a counterforce—which physicists have named the strong force—operating at short range within the nucleus. The strong force has been a major concern in physics research since its existence was first postulated in the 1930s.

One more force—the weak force—operates inside the nucleus. The weak force is responsible for some of the radioactive decays of nuclei. The four fundamental forces—strong, electromagnetic, weak, and gravitational—are responsible for every process in the universe. One of the important strains in modern theoretical physics is the idea that, although they seem very different, they are different aspects of a single underlying force (see unified field theory).