Like a Room Full of People
Imagine you’re in a really crowded room, everyone is standing close together, touching elbows. Even if each person only takes up a tiny part of the room, they still feel like a solid wall because there’s so many people blocking your way.
Atoms work the same way. Even though atoms are 99.999% empty space, they're packed with tiny particles, like electrons and nuclei, that move really fast and don’t let other atoms pass through easily. These tiny parts act like the people in the crowded room, making it feel solid.
What Happens When You Try to Push Through
If you try to push your hand through a wall, the atoms in your hand are trying to push through the atoms in the wall. Even though both sides are mostly empty space, there’s just too many tiny particles in the way, and they’re all moving around, bumping into each other.
That’s why your hand stops at the wall, even though both your hand and the wall are mostly empty!
Examples
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See also
- Do atoms exist?
- Can I compute the mass of a coin based on the sound of its fall?
- What is combined motion?
- What is pressure?
- What is Newton’s law of universal gravitation?