The Unrealistic Science Mod Revamped!

  • Blorph
    11th Nov 2012 Member 1 Permalink

    @firefreak11 (View Post)

     I don't know yet, but I'll try.

     

    @dragonborn99 (View Post)

     Well have you done any programming before? check out this and this.

     

    Then message firefreak and I.

  • jombo23
    11th Nov 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    @firefreak11 (View Post)

     Im not much of a programmer, but i am a 3d modeler. i use solidworks and are certified.

  • firefreak11
    11th Nov 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    @dragonborn99 (View Post)

     Well we already have a lot of people doing that so I don't know if you would be able unless you code.

  • Michael238
    11th Nov 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    Is it just me, or is it really hard to make a proton? I ask this because I had made a box with a few down quarks in it, with the rest of the space filled with up quarks. The end result was a bunch of neutrons, but only two protons.

  • jombo23
    11th Nov 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    hmm

    well, protons are 2 ups and a down, right? so your experiment should have yeilded more protons. protons however, never exist by themselves, so...... it should be alot harder to make them

  • firefreak11
    11th Nov 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    @Michael238 (View Post)

     Yes, I am working on fixing this for the next update.

  • jombo23
    11th Nov 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    Dude, you should totally include radiation with the next release. it would be really cool if for gamma radiation you actually had little particles moving in a wave shape and it just went through particles and warmed them a up a little

  • tommig
    11th Nov 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    @firefreak11 (View Post)

    Is the source currently from the old PT or ++?

  • Michael238
    11th Nov 2012 Member 1 Permalink

    @jombo23 (View Post)

     Last I checked, free protons are one of results of ionizing hydrogen. Sometimes you get a proton-neutron pair, but that is from the rare deuterium isotope. In the experiment, the protons would absorb a neutron to make a nucleon, which would stand out from the quark-neutron mixture.

  • jombo23
    12th Nov 2012 Member 1 Permalink

    Last I checked a free proton would be sucked onto any element and either make it an ion, an isotope and unstable, so feel protons would not cause ionized hydrogen. check your science.  the only thing that could cause ionized hydrogen would be alpha or beta positive radiation that ripped its electron away. 

     

     

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