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Report, edit, etc...Posted by Rantent on 2005-03-28 at 22:42:46
Read this article,
Here
and tell me what you think the uses could be, or just how could this have worked?
Report, edit, etc...Posted by Nozomu on 2005-03-28 at 23:43:10
Hah, I saw the Red Dwarf episode they talk about at the bottom.

I don't see any practical applications of this technique, except to maybe get rid of unwanted matter, like radioactive waste or something.
Report, edit, etc...Posted by Wolf on 2005-03-28 at 23:49:31
well it seems logical, but the three times hotter than the sun.....
1. they woulden't be able to measure that heat
2. they woulden't be able to controll that heat(for a long period of time)
3. is it just me or does this sound like agiant hoax

well anyway this posible but it sound like there making some crap up

if this is true it would probably be the next big step to proving life on other planets
Report, edit, etc...Posted by warhammer40000 on 2005-03-28 at 23:52:06
From my opinion. Its a lie. It might be true. But i dont see any uses for it except... more discovery...

anyway, heres something that looks suspicious.

But others are not so sure. Ed Shuryak, a physicist at Stony Brook University in New York, said: "It's very useful in that it will inspire thinking in that direction.


There is no end quote. No Proofreading. There is also pop-ups everywhere, sound like cons to me... but im probly wrong.

They cant lie about that really.... but its for no use anyway....
Report, edit, etc...Posted by Felagund on 2005-03-29 at 16:45:07
They said the surface of the sun, not the inner core. So far, it doesn't have enough credibility to be taken more than with a grain of salt.
Report, edit, etc...Posted by MyStIcAl-MySt on 2005-03-29 at 17:16:17
Well after reading the article I had to laugh, honestly. Scientists made a "black hole" that lasted for not even a billionth of a second. I dunno I dont see any real use for making a black hole here on Earth, lol. But if its true its still pretty cool that they did make one, just hope that things dont go wrong tongue.gif
Report, edit, etc...Posted by axblader on 2005-03-29 at 17:28:22
how could they measure a billionth of a second? unless they have like a supercomputer that can detect it or something.

anyways. how could they detect the heat that fast? the sensor takes time to read the heat becasue it has to heat before it knows the temp.

must be a lie...
Report, edit, etc...Posted by Rantent on 2005-03-29 at 19:18:14
Ok, I asked my physics teacher how they detected the heat, and to detect extreme heat, you do not measure the substance itself, you measure the energy emitted from it at a known range in a vacuum.
Report, edit, etc...Posted by indecisiveman on 2005-03-30 at 03:32:11
Gosh scientists discover soooo much don't they. I wonder why we never see any of it. Maybe it is because they are all FRIPPIN' lies like this one. Here is your evidence.

"The intense heat generated forced the beams to break down into particles and form a ball of plasma about 300million times hotter than the surface of the Sun."

Hmm 300 million times hotter than the sun? Wow I am pretty sure if we got close to the sun we would die. But there they were right next to it. Except it was 300 million times hotter. Nice work scientists. Bravo? Complete bullcrap don't listen to it.


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