cameron marical Posted January 24, 2009 Posted January 24, 2009 energy=mass x circumfrence squared. yes ok, and the atoms and energy are the same thing? at least thats what einstein proposed, well, if we can take the energy out of an atom{i.e. atom bomb}, can we take the atom out of the energy. well, not take out, more like make out of.? if so, this can be used for alot of things, i know that this will take alot of energy, but, if we can supply it, then we can use these things on spaceships and make food and water and elements for repairs with this, and send these things to places like africa and solve world hunger by making food out energy. i know this will take alot of energy, but this is mostly future tense{hopefully neat future} and im assuming we have other forms of getting energy wich are very efficient, like fusion, and sending probes near the sun using modified solar panels and get huge amounts of energy from gamma and solar rays.
ydoaPs Posted January 24, 2009 Posted January 24, 2009 energy=mass x circumfrence squared. c=speed of light. E2=m2c4+p2c2 Do you have any idea how much energy you're talking about?
cameron marical Posted January 24, 2009 Author Posted January 24, 2009 ya, i do, but if we can solve that problem, than this can solve alot of other problems too. this is only in theory, im not saying we can do it now.
npts2020 Posted January 25, 2009 Posted January 25, 2009 IMO what you are asking is possible in theory but well beyond current technology and unlikely to be very efficient. Wouldn't it be simpler just to convert the matter you already have to the form you wish?
swansont Posted January 25, 2009 Posted January 25, 2009 Scientists have made antihydrogen, so it's certainly possible. But since you make as much antimatter as matter (ignoring CP violation for the moment), all that antimatter is going to annihilate, and you end up with nothing extra. There's no point to it. As far as making food and water, etc, you still have the same problem of assembling the elements from the protons and neutrons, so why not just start there?
cameron marical Posted January 26, 2009 Author Posted January 26, 2009 could you explane antimatter? i dont fully understand the concept.
Baby Astronaut Posted January 26, 2009 Posted January 26, 2009 could you explane antimatter? i dont fully understand the concept. Here ya go. http://particleadventure.org/frameless/antimatter.html http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/antimatter_sun_030929.html http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-antimatter.htm http://www.positron.edu.au/faq.html http://www.tech-faq.com/antimatter.shtml
cameron marical Posted January 28, 2009 Author Posted January 28, 2009 why would it make equal amounts of anti-and normal matter? the big bang, according to us, says differently.
swansont Posted January 28, 2009 Posted January 28, 2009 why would it make equal amounts of anti-and normal matter? the big bang, according to us, says differently. That's because of charge-parity (CP) violation. What we've investigated shows a very small effect (why the universe is matter is one of the big unanswered questions) From a practical standpoint (i.e. to a first-order approximation), you create equal amounts of matter and antimatter, because that and other conservation laws hold at that level.
cameron marical Posted January 29, 2009 Author Posted January 29, 2009 oh, could this charge-parity be used in something like this?
swansont Posted January 29, 2009 Posted January 29, 2009 oh, could this charge-parity be used in something like this? Not really. It's a very small effect.
kleinwolf Posted February 4, 2009 Posted February 4, 2009 [math]e=mc^2 [/math] could be a mnemotechnic for general relativity too : e=energy density m=a constant depending on the gravitational constant and the celerity of light c^2=curvature squared
lakmilis Posted March 29, 2009 Posted March 29, 2009 I do like these who is GR? and circumference squared.. cameron Spend some time on wiki , before trying to figure out things from a concept you don't quite grasp. However, you do have a very keen explorative mind.. that is very good to have
Mr Skeptic Posted March 30, 2009 Posted March 30, 2009 Yes, we can make equal parts matter and antimatter from energy, which is basically what particle accelerators are for -- the accelerated particles are the energy source for making high-energy particles. In practice though, it is far more useful to convert matter to energy, as do nuclear fusion in the sun and nuclear fission power plants.
GDG Posted April 3, 2009 Posted April 3, 2009 energy=mass x circumfrence squared. yes ok, and the atoms and energy are the same thing? at least thats what einstein proposed, well, if we can take the energy out of an atom{i.e. atom bomb}, can we take the atom out of the energy. well, not take out, more like make out of.? if so, this can be used for alot of things, i know that this will take alot of energy, but, if we can supply it, then we can use these things on spaceships and make food and water and elements for repairs with this, and send these things to places like africa and solve world hunger by making food out energy. i know this will take alot of energy, but this is mostly future tense{hopefully neat future} and im assuming we have other forms of getting energy wich are very efficient, like fusion, and sending probes near the sun using modified solar panels and get huge amounts of energy from gamma and solar rays. Yes, matter and energy are different forms of the same stuff. Matter is much, much more concentrated. Take a look at the antimatter bomb thread: the amount of energy equivalent to a 1 kg mass (of anything) is the amount of energy you would get out of a 210 megaton explosion (4X the size of the largest nuclear device ever detonated). That is a lot of energy to try and stuff back into a 1 kg box. I doubt that anyone is likely to try it The second problem is that we have no way right now of controlling what kind of matter we would get. Particle accelerators focus huge energies in a very small space: some of that energy gets converted to matter -- and almost instantly back into energy again. Most of the matter comes out as highly unstable particles, which decay into other particles, which may ultimately decay into protons, electrons, neutrinos, and photons. Very difficult to accumulate any mass that way...
coke Posted April 3, 2009 Posted April 3, 2009 wait a sec... i thought nucear bombs took energy due to the higher stability and nuclear binding force of products than the starting material (i.e. hydrogen > helium, uranium > thalium, lead, etc.) Not because there is any change in mass (at least not before talking about the sub-neutron levels) Antimatter, on the other hand, that I know releases energy destroying mass...
GDG Posted April 3, 2009 Posted April 3, 2009 The reference to the bombs was just convenient, as a measure of the energy required to make a kg of mass. An "antimatter bomb" would convert 100% of its mass into energy: if you were to make a kg of mass, you would need that much energy. 210 megatons is about 8.8 x 10^8 gigajoules.
coke Posted April 3, 2009 Posted April 3, 2009 By the way... i wonder If you have a very strong electromagnetic field... and you pass a beam of light or gamma rays through it, can you split up the photons into matter and antimatter? That would be a good example of making atoms out of energy.
lakmilis Posted April 4, 2009 Posted April 4, 2009 coke: no... I can not see any conventinal sense of the concept electromagnetic field' and it being so 'lewd' it can turn photons of various energies into antimatter and matter... it does nto follow the stdard model tbh. (severians field).
swansont Posted April 4, 2009 Posted April 4, 2009 A photon splitting up into a particle/antiparticle pair does not conserve momentum (assuming it conserves energy). You need something around to recoil for the pair production to occur.
coke Posted April 5, 2009 Posted April 5, 2009 Well ok, an electron + positron = gamma ray, right? (and electrons are attracted to positrons by magnetic attraction) So cant this be done the other way around? I mean there are easier ways to get positrons, I know...
swansont Posted April 5, 2009 Posted April 5, 2009 Well ok, an electron + positron = gamma ray, right? (and electrons are attracted to positrons by magnetic attraction) So cant this be done the other way around? I mean there are easier ways to get positrons, I know... Two gammas (or more), and the attraction is electrostatic. But yes, a gamma of at least 1.02 MeV can produce an electron/positron pair
coke Posted April 6, 2009 Posted April 6, 2009 (edited) you can make positron + electron from gamma rays! or can you? it also draws some nucleus, i wonder if it gets changed by the reaction... check out this page... but apparently it has nothing to do with electromagnetic field...rather just 1.02 MeV high energy photons, like swanston said although i suppose you can use a field to keep electrons and positrons apart afterwards... actually it seems like a very good way to generate positrons, and for that case, antimatter... the titan laser creates huge amounts of antimatter from sheets of gold (see here) Edited April 6, 2009 by coke
Mr Skeptic Posted April 6, 2009 Posted April 6, 2009 Yes, however you need another particle to conserve momentum.
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