-
Big Bottom
- The bigger the cushion, the sweeter the pushin
- That's what I said.
- The looser the waistband, the deeper the quicksand
- Or so I have read.
- My baby fits me like a flesh tuxedo.
- I love to sink her with my pink torpedo.
- Big bottom
- Big bottom
- Talk about bum cakes,
- My gal's got 'em.
- Big bottom,
- Drive me out of my mind.
- How can I leave this behind?
- I saw her on monday, twas my lucky bun day
- You know what I mean.
- I love her each weekday, each velvety cheekday
- You know what I mean.
- My love gun's loaded and she's in my sights
- Big game's waiting there inside her tights
- Big bottom
- Big bottom
- Talk about mud flaps
- My gal's got 'em.
- Big bottom
- Drive me out of my mind.
- How can I leave this behind?
-
Stonehenge
- In ancient times hundreds of years before the dawn of history
- Lived this strange rights of pain the [Incomprehensible]
- No one knows who they were what they were doing
- But the legacy remains here into the living rock of Stonehenge
+
Atoms actually consist of protons, neutrons and electrons, and can
+be torn apart by raising the temperature of the atom so high that the
+forces are not strong enough to hold them together. Once we break
+apart the atom, what happens? How do these smaller particles
+interact? We can understand the atom at follows:
- Stonehenge, where the demons dwell
- Where the banshees live and they do live well
- Stonehenge where a man is a man
- And the children dance to the pipes of pan
- Stonehenge, 'tis a magic place
- Where the moon doth rise with a dragon's face
- Stonehenge where the virgins lie
- And the prayer of devils fill the midnight sky
+

- And you my love, won't you take my hand?
- We'll go back in time to that mystic land
- Where the dew drops cry and the cats meow
- I will take you there, I will show you how
- And oh, how they danced
- The little children of Stonehenge
- Beneath the haunted moon for fear
- That day break might come too soon
+
A Hydrogen Atom, the simplest possible atom, is made of one proton
+and one electron. The proton, which is much heavier than the electron
+(in fact about 2000 times heavier) sits in the center, with the
+electron orbiting around the proton. The electron is negatively
+charged[ref], while the proton is positively charged[ref], so they are
+attracted to each other. The electron stays in orbit around the
+proton, just like the Earth stays in orbit around the Sun.
- And where were they now
- The little people of Stonehenge
- And what would they say to us
- If we were here tonight
-
Tonight I'm gonna rock you
- Little girl, it's a great big world but there's
- only on of me
- You can't touch 'cause I cost too much but
- Tonight I'm gonna rock you
- Tonight I'm gonna rock you
- Tonight!
- You're sweet but you're just four feet
- And you still got your baby teeth
- You're too young and I'm too well hung
- Tonight I'm gonna rock you
- Tonight I'm gonna rock you
- Tonight!
- You're hot, you take all we got, not a dry
- seat in the house
- Next day, we'll be on our way
- Tonight I'm gonna rock you
- Tonight!
- Chorus:
- Little girl, it's a great big world, but there's
- only one of me-
+
+
Is this as small as it gets?
+
+
+
Are these particles the smallest particles, or can we split them,
+just like we split the atom?
+
+
+
We believe the electron is indeed fundamental. After trying to
+split it apart in many different ways, physicists have concluded that
+it is probably not possible, meaning that electrons are not made of
+anything smaller.
+
+
+
However, we know that the proton is made up of other smaller
+particles, which we call quarks. The proton is made up of two kinds of
+quarks, called "up" and "down". [We can imagine]?? the proton is made
+up of three quarks: two up quarks and one down quark.
+
+
+

+
+
+
What about other atoms?
+
+
+
This simple model can be expanded to describe more complicated
+atoms. For example, the Helium atom consists of two protons and two
+neutrons in the center, forming the nucleus [ref], with two electrons
+orbiting them. The proton, made of quarks is very similar to the
+neutron, while the electron is indivisible. With a similar mass[ref],
+they have very similar properties[ref], apart from their different
+electric charge [ref] (the proton is positively charged[ref], the
+neutron is neutral and has no electric charge[ref]). This is because
+they are also made up of quarks, just in a different
+combination. While the proton has two up quarks and one down quark,
+the neutron consists of one up quark and two down quarks.
+
+
+


+
+
+
+
+
What about their charges?
+
+
+
How can it be that the proton and neutron have a different charge,
+if they are made of the same building blocks?
+
+
+
We know that the proton is up, up, down and charged +1 and the
+neutron is up, down, down and charged 0. The only possible way of
+resolving this is that the up quark is charged +2/3 and the down quark
+is charged -1/3. The fractions only appear here because we discovered
+the electron before we discovered the quarks, and called the electron
+charge "-1". If we had called the charge of the electron "-3", the
+quark charges would be whole numbers.
+
+
+
Questions we still need to answer
+
+
+
What are charges? Why do we call them "+" and "-"? What holds
+together the Hydrogen atom? And what holds together the nucleus? What
+about radioactivity? Why do physicists always draw funny graphs when
+explaining this? And finally, what is this "Higgs boson" everyone is
+talking about? Continue to answer these questions.