insufficient to
make a recognisable
explosion, hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
From the article, The most dangerous delivery truck? How a lorry-load of antimatter will help solve secrets of universe written by Robin McKie, science editor of The Observer.
McKie writes:
Antimatter is the most expensive material on Earth – it’s estimated it would cost several trillion dollars to make a gram – and it can only be manufactured in particle physics laboratories such as the Cern research centre near Geneva.
It is also extremely tricky to handle. If antimatter makes contact with normal matter, both are annihilated, releasing a powerful burst of electromagnetic radiation. Only by carefully combining sets of powerful electrical and magnetic fields in special devices can antimatter be stored safely.
“That makes moving it around very difficult, though we are now close to making our first journey,” said Prof Stefan Ulmer, a scientist at Cern. “Antimatter has so much to tell us. That is why we are doing this.”
The prospect of a similar blast happening in real life is remote, scientists insist – the quantities of antimatter carried will be insufficient to make an explosion of any recognisable nature.
Three things here to point out besides that last paragraph being a wonderful assemblage of words.
One, I did not know that in Europe recognisable is spelled with a S and not a Z so here in the states recognisable is tossed by spell check.
Two, the work in question is being done at European Organization for Nuclear Research which is known as CERN. I have never understood that. (along with the world soccer organization being known as FIFA).
Three, I would like a little more information on just what makes, “an explosion of any recognisable nature.“
When Enrico Fermi and the Manhattan Project folks set up the first self sustaining Atomic Reactor Pile, they were 99% sure it wouldn’t blow up and destroy all life within 100’s of miles if not the earth itself in an uncontrollable chain reaction gone uncontrollable.
They chose downtown Chicago for the test site.
Not until the Plutarkians came to strip mine Chicago in the 1990s did the city face such a possibility but the Plutarkians were defeated by the Biker Mice from Mars that lived in the scoreboard at Wrigley Field.
Still I feel my question is valid.
When dealing with antimatter … how big, how bad is an explosion of any recognisable nature?
Back in the day when I was in college there was an out break of measles and students who had never been vaccinated were advised to get a shot.
I thought about it and thought about it and thought, I had never been vacinated.
I called my Mom and she thought about it and thought about it and decided that in our family of 11 kids we had been exposed to measles but the last time someone had it, my brother Pete, she brought us all down to the Doctors who gave us Gamma Globulin short term protection shots and was told to get us all in for a vacine in about 6 months.
But with 11 kids, one thing happens after another and we never got back for our vaccine so Mom advised me to get the shot.
In line at the Student Health Clinic I was given a waver to sign
It said something along the lines of 1 out of 100,000 people MIGHT develop symptoms or have a reaction or get hit with Encephalitis.
In parenthesis the disclaimer read (A swelling of the brain).
Standing in line, I raised my head and yelled out, ‘Can I get anymore information about this SWELLING OF THE BRAIN?’
Everyone in lined ducked their heads down to look at the disclaimer.
The nurses all glared at me.
But I had an audience.
I then read off ALL the bad things that could happen and asked for more information as the line slowly move forward.
When I got to the nurse she leaned in and said to I wasn’t being very helpful as many of the people in line had a lot of anxiety about getting a shot, would I please SHUT UP.
I stood there.
Then I asked the nurse in a loud voice, “DID YOU EVER TALK TO ANYONE WHO DIED FROM A MEASLES SHOT?”
The nurse said LOUDLY, “OF COURSE NOT!”
And I said, “BECAUSE THEY WERE DEAD!”
And that nurse took that needle and jammed it straight into my arm.
She looked at me and grinned.
“You flinched,” she said.
All I want is a little more information on these explosions of an unrecognizable nature.