When are asked about why an electron cannot fall into the nucleus we put together the argument that:
as Heisenberg's uncertainty principle says
$\Delta x \Delta p$ $\geq \frac{h}{4 \pi}$
$\Delta x \Delta v$ $\geq \frac{h}{4 \pi m}$
now we say that "as the size of the nucleus is 2fm(diameter)"
$\Delta v$ $\geq \frac{6.626 \cdot 10^{-34}}{2 \cdot 10^{-15} 9.1 \cdot 10^{-31} 4 \pi}$
$\Delta v$ $\geq 2.89871 \cdot 10^{10} ms^{-1}$
and we say that as "for electron to be in the nucleus it must have velocity greater than the speed of light; therefore, it can't exist inside the nucleus."
But I feel that there is a problem with that because $\Delta v$ represents the uncertainty in the velocity of electron, but my point is the same argument could be put together for a sphere present in the electron's probabilistic cloud, for example for the $1s$ orbital if we take a sphere of the same diameter as that of the nucleus at any point in the $1s$ orbital other than the nucleus itself we will be able to say that the electron should also not be able to exist in that sphere, and hence we can show by taking pieces of the $1s$ orbital that the electron can't exist anywhere in that orbital.