Say I have a hydrogen atom in a really small C-clamp.
With me so far?
I take a really small pair of tweezers and pluck off a proton and throw it in the wastebasket.
Then I take a pair of tweezers 1/186th the size of the previous one and pluck an electron and throw that haze of probability into the same wastebasket.
Would I, then, have a hydrogen atom? Is it really that simple to transmute elements?
I know this sounds simplistic (and it is) but I wondered if there wasn’t something intrinsic to elements or whether just changing the protons and electrons would get the job done.
In fact, it can be done today. The old alchemists dream of converting lead into gold can be done. The only reason it isn’t generally done is it costs a helluva lot more to make gold this way than it is just to mine it.
I’m not sure where you got the 1/186th number for the tweezer size differential. It is similar (but off by an order of magnitude) to the mass differential between an electron and a proton.
Otherwise, you have just gotten rid of all that is a hydrogen atom.
Actually, if you take a stable helium atom ([sup]4[/sup]He), and remove a proton and an electron, you will be left with an atom of radioactive tritium ([sup]3[/sup]H).