Cornell University researchers have recorded the highest-resolution image of atoms ever.
Everything is the same proton or neutron as each other at .1 NM. Human cells are around 10,000 NM. Really not far, and what you actually see is the electron field, as the actual proton neutron atom is 99.999 percent empty. Cell membranes are like nets of mesh with extra small perforations, structurally or atomically, dedicated particles are the scale I think electron fields are structured first, but ribosomes look so weird and lumpy, split in two zipper parts, as a definition of infinite granularity in a particle. While electrons freely rotate the atoms at 1/1800 the size of the protons, electrons are apparently why electricity is mass conducted by smooth stuff like copper. Neutrinos have almost zero mass by a number of decimals that leave question to google. Safe to assume these ones are free-er, 1800 to 100000 times smaller than the electrons and in the electrons small gravity is considered heavier than the stronger forces practically acting as a lower gravity moon atmosphere sloped by the larger forces shapes. neutrinos pass through almost everything and if they are functional as memory can tell us what the center of the sun felt like The center of the earth is the closest star to me and I wonder if it's gravity absorbs frequencies
If you imagine the core of the Earth as a sun behind the invisible crust, it’s aesthetically pleasing like some kind of path of exile aura but it’s the last one
here is what sparked the elaboration in my head













