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Why is Uranium the Heaviest Stable Atom?

Atom heaviest STABLE uranium
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Why is Uranium the Heaviest Stable Atom?

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Readers might be interested in my reply to this question. It was that, essentially, one needs to accept that the structure of an atomic nucleus is inter-locked with the cubic structure of the aether itself, meaning that the aether is like a fluid crystal which assumes structural form owing to the field effects of electrical charge components of the atom, but which can dissolve as needed so as not to preclude free motion of the atom through space. There was a time in physics when the research based on Moseley’s law led to Moseley diagrams which were the first indication that elements were missing from the periodic system at Z values of 43, 61, 72, 75, 85 and 87. That was back in 1922, but over the following years the atoms at 72, 75 and 87 put in an appearance, but a book by Shankland on Atomic and Nuclear Physics dated 1955 tells me that Z = 43, 61 and 85 do not occur naturally, as they are radioactive and have relatively short lives. They were, Shankland states, not identified until t

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