the Energy of a paper clip is equal to the energy of that of an atomic bomb, so their is no way one can extract the energy from the paperclips unless we were in hell. How would one when extract the energy of a paper clip in the first place.
10/14/2005 6:08:54 PM
Well that certainly blew my mind
10/14/2005 6:11:51 PM
e = mc^2energy equals mass times the speed of light squaredmass of a nuclear warhead is larger than mass of a paperclip
10/14/2005 6:18:47 PM
other than the fact that a physics major posted that?
10/14/2005 6:19:56 PM
so? i'm a mechanical engineering student...should i be expected to know everything about cars? because i don't.i could, however, see if she said "per unit mass," but she didn't. which is why i'm pointing it out[Edited on October 14, 2005 at 6:25 PM. Reason : ]
10/14/2005 6:23:13 PM
no ur not but how can one not know that the mass of an atomic bomb is significantly greater than the mass of a paper clip? or better yet: how can one assume that the mass of a paper clip and the mass of an atomic bomb are equal?
10/14/2005 6:26:34 PM
10/14/2005 7:16:54 PM
Good thing all of my antimatter paper clips are locked up in the supply cabinet.Seriously, what kind of fucking argument is this anyway?
10/14/2005 7:20:37 PM
10/14/2005 7:25:43 PM
Oh good, another Penzoate thread.
10/14/2005 7:28:58 PM
10/14/2005 7:30:03 PM
you lost all credibility and standing by posting here.
10/14/2005 7:32:57 PM
ahahahahaha nice comeback.
10/14/2005 7:34:30 PM
Eh, we're getting better and better at producting antimatter. We'll get there sooner or later.
10/14/2005 7:35:59 PM
go ahead, argue that a paperclip does not have roughly 90 TJ of rest mass energy. If you win, that means the nature of arguing is broken in that particular case.But actually, someone go find how much anitmater has been created by humans. I remember hearing numbers on it, but it's not like i'm gona remember them. You can take the first limiting factor that the mass energy of that antimatter is going to be WAY less that the amount of energy that is feasible to use for the project of creating it. I know they've never created enough to power a space mission b/c i've heard discussions of the feesability of it. And that's a very small, not visiable amount of mater.[Edited on October 14, 2005 at 7:40 PM. Reason : ]
10/14/2005 7:39:15 PM
It's something like 5-10 nanograms a year now, I think. But production will increase. Especially once the strong AIs are born and decide to help us out.
10/14/2005 7:42:40 PM
One nanogram would be still be like 90 MJ. Still can't see it, but that's a good fucking amount of energy. All of that would be on the order of a megawatt-day, but at 0.7 cents/kW I suppose it would still be only like 200$ of electricity.
10/14/2005 7:49:56 PM
PLEASE KILL THIS WOMANAND BY "KILL" I MEAN "SUSPEND"
10/14/2005 9:10:44 PM
This is where Penzoate tipped his/her hand:http://www.brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=357772&page=1
10/15/2005 11:53:39 AM
man, computers are so damn cheap these days
10/15/2005 12:17:27 PM
it's pretty cool, because in a nuclear explosion, there is complete baryon conservationso if you have X protons and Y neutrons, you'll get X protons and Y neutronsit's only their configuration that changesso the equation E=mc^2 is really an indications of the Energy extracted from this configurational "mass" (it will still show up as real mass on your scale though, just to be clear)
10/15/2005 2:16:13 PM