Colonel William A. Phillips

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In atomic physics, even–even (EE) nuclei are nuclei with an even number of neutrons and an even number of protons. Even-mass-number nuclei, which comprise 151/251 = ~60% of all stable nuclei, are bosons, i.e. they have integer spin. The vast majority of them, 146 out of 151, belong to the EE class; they have spin 0 because of pairing effects.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ Evans, Robley D. (1955), The Atomic Nucleus, New York: McGraw-Hill