liquid hydrogen and/or helium?

  • Sergeant_Starfruit
    12th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    Lol Spock. Anyway back to you guys, He's comparing collisions at near light speed with solar storms. Duh. :) But your forgetting something. The atoms spend so little amount of time at that temperature that it doesn't have enough time to heat anything else. By the time they get to the wall there only about 100,000,00 degrees Celsuis. Does nothing.

  • AmericanHero
    12th Feb 2013 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • Potbelly
    12th Feb 2013 Banned 0 Permalink
    This post is hidden because the user is banned
  • wes12321
    13th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

     

    no dip sherlock! (i mean potbelly) i know that there is too little time to transfer heat to the walls of the cacumn tube, but my proof of the Large Hadron Collider creating small black holes is found http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micro_black_hole#section_4

    look under "Can we produce micro black holes?" 

    i know that it says that there black holes would instantly vaporize, but still, they would do something to the proton beams

     

    oh and to answer your question, earth has a magnetic shield, so anything like solar winds and black holes smaller than a car would be repelled WAY far off from the atmosphere, but even if one got to earths atmosphere, since the super thin air of the exosphere and ionosphere dont really have enough gas particles to conduct heat, any heat produced stays way up in the thermosphere, which is why the thermosphere got its name

     

    and from what sergeant starfruit said, 100,000,00 degrees celsius is one hundred and eighty million, thirty two degrees fahrenheight. since the surface of the sun is about 10,000 degrees farenhight, 180,000,032 degrees farenhight is 18 thousand times hotter than the surface of the sun

     

  • Sergeant_Starfruit
    13th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    Although 18,000,000 degrees farenhight may seem hot, these particles a vaporising extremely fast and a moving so fast that they don't conduct to anything.

  • wes12321
    14th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    ok can we just get back to what this post was supposed to be PLEASE? i am getting tired of trying to argue with you guys, but seriously, can we just get back to liquid hydrogen and liquid helium? PLEASE?

  • Sergeant_Starfruit
    14th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    Ehh, I was having fun with the CERN argument(that I started) :) But okay. *Sigh* Liquid hydrogen and helium is a good idea. Congrats on thinking of this. :|

  • wes12321
    14th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    umm thanks i guess?

    :/

  • Soap
    15th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    the lhyd idea sounds good, but the hlum sounds a bit too unrealistic...

  • wes12321
    17th Feb 2013 Member 0 Permalink

    yeah, so i've been told...

    but who cares? it can always be changed

     

    Can i get some more feedback and replies? possibly from some devs or someone who can make this and share it with me?

     

    sigh.... i am about to lose my best suggestion to time... i suppose that there are other ways to get attention on liquid hydrogen and helium