Spyke

Thanks for this clever summary! Now there's no point in clicking the video /s

8
lemmy.world

The aurora borealis would be amazing, for a limited time.

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Klearreply
piefed.world

Certainly better than the one in my kitchen.

7
lemmy.world

We would be long gone. Can you imagine what a football-sized (or even bigger) antimatter meteorite would do?

Hint: six to seven grams of antimatter is the equivalent of the bomb that took out Hiroshima.

7
teftreply
piefed.social

6 to 7 grams? No. 1/4 of a gram of antimatter reacting with 1/4 gram of matter is just about the right mix. That’ll be around 15 kilotons.

4
Treczoksreply
lemmy.world

I re-did the calculation. You are closer, but the conversion of half a gram yields about 10 kilotonnes. Makes the meteorite a bit worse.

Calculation based on 4'184'000'000'000 joules per kiloton TNT.

5

Now we just gotta ramp up production at LHC. Nobody tell them what the antimatter is for.

3
feddit.org

The video doesn't mention the sun. Could an antimatter sun shine?

4
lemmy.cafe

In fact, yes. Photons don't have a charge, so anti-photons would illuminate the Earth all the same. The issue, as the video points out, will come from too much energy hitting the Earth's surface, not too little.

14
Swedneckreply
discuss.tchncs.de

in fact so far as i can tell, there wouldn't be anti-photons, they'd just be normal photons

3

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What if everything was antimatter EXCEPT Earth? | Spyke