Im not sure I quite agree with this, anti matter and matter reactions are the most energetic in the known universe, far surpassing nuclear reactions, im going to read up on this and get back to the thread, if thats the case creating this particle of anti matter should have massively drained energy from multiple nuclear reactors? it no makes sense.
I don't think creating anti matter itself is draining, only colliding matter at massive energies which I understand to be the only way to create explosions in particle reactors large enough to 'pop' an antimatter into existence.
yes but you have to make the antimatter first which takes huge amounts of energy, then store it which also takes energy.
You could whoever use it for extremely energy dense fuel.
So you could say make it in huge land facilities using large conventional power plants to power submarines or spaceships (if you can store it for a long time and the reactor is small enoguh to make sense.
Although if both the antimatter particle and it's mater counter part are converted 100% into energy.
You only need to make sure the process you make and store antimatter is less than that total energy so say it could take 150% of the energy release by the antimatter particle to make, but you'll still get 50% of the energy from the matter particle destroyed as "profit".
which could mean you could make a energy profitable antimatter matter power plant but i don't think you're going to see the production becoming that efficient.
Really? I bet the Vulcans have detected our Human technological achievement and are on their way right now!!! wont you have egg on your face![]()
Nice bump there.![]()
The problem is thou that even if at some point we can build a viable matter/anti-matter reactor, we still have no method of drawing power directly from the reaction. It would still basically produce heat, which makes steam to power a turbine. It might be damned efficient at it compared to a nuclear reactor but it would still be ponderous steam based technology.
Next stop the stars:D[/QUOTE] ...not even going to make a noticable explosion.
Why does that matter? Isn't the electricity generated from the steam turbine the important thing?
liampope said:If I recall from reading an interview with a CERN guy a while ago, the current process requires in the region of billions of times more energy to create the antimatter than is released in its annihilation.
you still needs kilo's / tonnes of the stuff to make it to the nearest star....
the odd particle is of no use... its not even going to make a noticable explosion.
ermm, well no - thats impossible.
yes but by definition you cannot get more energy out than you put in - the energy it takes to make antimatter can't be less than the energy released when it annihilates, that would be creating energy from nothing.
If it's impossible to create energy from nothing then how does the universe exist?
Either it's possible to create energy from nothing or the universe/energy has always existed somehow.
If it's impossible to create energy from nothing then how does the universe exist?
Either it's possible to create energy from nothing or the universe/energy has always existed somehow.
It's impossible to harness anti-matter, even if we could it would disappear in a billionth of a second.