questionposter Posted April 20, 2012 Posted April 20, 2012 Is there a way to compress matter into degenerate matter here on Earth? Would have you to constantly compress it or once you compress it does it just stay like that?
RichIsnang Posted April 20, 2012 Posted April 20, 2012 I think they have made degenerate matter, they have made a BEC and isn't that degenerate matter? I don't know if you have to constantly it tho Correction: I dont think a BEC is degenerate matter I don't think we can make it
granpa Posted April 21, 2012 Posted April 21, 2012 the easiest way to make degenerate matter is to first make rydberg matter. then it easy collapses to degenerate matter. this is how ultradense deuterium was made.
questionposter Posted April 21, 2012 Author Posted April 21, 2012 (edited) Well, looks like their already working on making it into fuel, has been going on for quite some time, which seems to make sense. Edited April 21, 2012 by questionposter
questionposter Posted April 21, 2012 Author Posted April 21, 2012 (edited) they're No, it's "their" because it's "their" action of already working on it. Though I suppose it is an incomplete sentence with that in mind, so thanks for pointing it out. There should have been another clause beginning with a verb in plus-perfect form after the comma that is after "fuel". Edited April 21, 2012 by questionposter -1
granpa Posted April 21, 2012 Posted April 21, 2012 (edited) they're = they are looks like thy are already working on making it into fuel Edited April 21, 2012 by granpa
questionposter Posted April 21, 2012 Author Posted April 21, 2012 (edited) they're = they are their = possessive form of "to be" as an adjective, referring to their action of working on it. Edited April 21, 2012 by questionposter -1
mathematic Posted April 21, 2012 Posted April 21, 2012 How did this degenerate into a question about vocabulary?
questionposter Posted April 21, 2012 Author Posted April 21, 2012 How did this degenerate into a question about vocabulary? Someone pointed out a meaningless grammar mistake that turned out to not actually be a mistake itself. -1
RichIsnang Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 I thought if they made it on earth it would just fall straight into the middle of the earth?
questionposter Posted April 24, 2012 Author Posted April 24, 2012 I thought if they made it on earth it would just fall straight into the middle of the earth? Why would it do that? The ground still repels it, and it's only a small amount.
RichIsnang Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 I was thinking because it is so dense, but I guess if it's only a small amount then fair enough
mathematic Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 Why would it do that? The ground still repels it, and it's only a small amount. How small? With a density ~ 5 x 10^17 kg/m^3, anything visible to the naked eye would be extremely heavy. It could easily push through the surface of the earth to a significant depth.
granpa Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 the density of metallic hydrogen is probably between 0.3 and 3 g/cm^3 even ultra-dense deuterium is only 100,000 g/cm^3 you must be thinking of neutronium
questionposter Posted April 28, 2012 Author Posted April 28, 2012 (edited) Neutronium is degenerate matter Neutronium requires unimaginable amounts of energy to create though, it takes a super-massive star to supernova to create it. Edited April 28, 2012 by questionposter
RichIsnang Posted April 29, 2012 Posted April 29, 2012 Yeah good luck making neutronium on earth in any substantial quantity
John Cuthber Posted April 29, 2012 Posted April 29, 2012 Someone pointed out a meaningless grammar mistake that turned out to not actually be a mistake itself. Nope, it started when someone made a mistake (which someone pointed out).
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