At 10:54 AM 3/17/5, Jones Beene wrote: >In cosmology, we find ample evidence that supports the idea of matter can >be composed of multiple neutrons: neutron stars. > >Zero protons, only neutrons, supposedly. > >These dense bodies, which contain an enormous number of bound neutrons, >suggest that as yet unexplained forces come into play when neutrons gather >en masse. But how small can they get? and could they be something else?
No unexplained force there. The force is gravity. Neutron stars form instead of black holes when there is insufficient mass to crunch the neutrons and form the black hole. Dineutrons have been observed - it's just they are not stable and have a short half-life. Regards, Horace Heffner

