A cool suggestion

  • richnick82
    22nd Nov 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    I have seen the beta version, new elements and cool stuff that has being add in. One cool thing is if photon goes through the glass, it turns into all kinds of colors (Newton's experiment), but if u let it through the glass again, it stays the same (Not in Newton's experiment),
    so what I want to say is they should make the photon turns back to its original color after its enter through 2 glass, cause thats whats gonna happen in real life (All thanx to Newton).
  • powder_master
    22nd Nov 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    thats cool! ++

    and i want to suggest more(to able this for some applications, but i dont sure its good idea...):

    the photons are be heated by its color: red is the lowest temp'(200C), and purple is the highest temp'(1000C).
  • Catelite
    22nd Nov 2010 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    richnick82:
    but if u let it through the glass again, it stays the same (Not in Newton's experiment)

    Just try putting photons through another wedge of glass in the exact opposite direction and then a third to make the direction right, and you'll end up with white again. It's only white because all of the photons balance one anothers' colors out, even IRL.

    powder_master:
    the photons are be heated by its color: red is the lowest temp'(200C), and purple is the highest temp'(1000C).

    This already exists technically. Try putting photons through glow of different temperatures.
  • Diissaster
    22nd Nov 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    SAND also doesn't melt into GLAS sometimes.
  • Pilihp64
    22nd Nov 2010 Developer 0 Permalink
    Diissaster
    sand melts into glass, not the other way around
  • Diissaster
    22nd Nov 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    Oh yer oops, i forgot that.
    Shouldn't sand melt into BGLA
  • Pilihp64
    22nd Nov 2010 Developer 0 Permalink
    Diissaster
    it does, heat it up into lava, then cool it, it will be GLAS and BGLA
  • Catelite
    22nd Nov 2010 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    Ultimately, I should point out that Powder Toy isn't generally aiming to be realistic.

    Ever wonder how heavy a pile of twenty PLUT particles would be?
  • Diissaster
    22nd Nov 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    Yer in real life it would...yer.
    In real life ACID doesn't disolve GLAS
  • lolzy
    22nd Nov 2010 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    In real life antimatter DOES destroy diamond... or have they not tried to find out yet?