Under normal circumstances, only the outer protons held by the positive temperature particles' weak field acquire the opposite particles (electrons) in orbit. To balance the rest of the positive charge in the inner layers of the nucleus, a cloud of electrons orbit around nucleus just below the layer of positive temperature particles.
Both temperature and gravity particles also acquire opposite particles as a cloud of particles in orbit around the nucleus. The opposite particle cloud orbits just above the last respective positive particle layer. None of the orbiting cloud opposite particle is associated with a specific positive particle. This could account for the different statistics observed. Electrons associated with a specific orbiting proton displays Fermi–Dirac statistics and electrons in a cloud surrounding the nucleus at an inner layer just below the \(T^+\) particles displays Bose–Einstein statistics.
The rest are in the clouds. And so is retirement.