THE ALL-NUCLEAR ATOM
AND
ITS IMPLICATIONS
With thirty-eight Ilustrations
by
Albert Cushing Crehore, Ph. D.
Published by the Author
1199 Lander Road ,
Cleveland 24, Ohio.PREFACE
Statements are nade near the beginning of
this work that "A new type of atom is needed"
and that "The all-nuclear type of atom becomes
necessary because stationary orbits of electrons
are untenable." These ideas are consistently
adhered to throughout, and no deductions are
based upon the type of atom described in the
Smyth Official Report (Atomic Bomb Project,
1945), "in which electrons move somewhat like
planets about the sun."
The use of electrostatic forces is necessita~
ted by this plan to explain many phenomena in
the important quiescent state of atoms, that is,
before they are disturbed by bombardment from
without.
‘The requirements created by this new field,
which has been developed during the past thirty
years, call for an adequate and appropriate
treatise on electrostatic forces, a treatise not
previously in existence, The explanation of that
lack is, no doubt, that there never had been en-
visioned a quiescent state in any atomic theory.
So the author worked out the required equations
and published them in a book "The Crehore A-
tom, a Mathematical Treatise for the Steady
States.
This treatise has made possible the under-
standing of many phenomena in the quiescent
state. No new law of force is introduced here.
The experimental law of force of Coulomb, with