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21:01
there's a little bit of stuff in space, so it's not completely silent
That last nitpicky point was kind of what I was getting at. We could never hear it. But it might be able to pick up what technically classifies as a sound
That's pretty neat I think
But sounds are defined by their volume and frequency, i.e., the wave.
Anything sensitive enough to pick up such small "sounds" would probably be sensitive to interference from a lot of sources I'd imagine
So, as far as I know, there would be sound and we could measure it. We measure plenty of particle collisions for various reasons.
@Vap0r I'm not sure if you can pick up any sound, when there is no medium to transport the wave
I'd say no
21:05
> Outer space has very low density and pressure, and is the closest physical approximation of a perfect vacuum. But no vacuum is truly perfect, not even in interstellar space, where there are still a few hydrogen atoms per cubic meter. from wikipedia
@ssube is right though. Space isn't absolutely nothing. It's just very, very close to absolutely nothing
If we are considering absolute vacuum then no. But you are right, absolute vacuum is not the case
> If ware are considering absolute vacuum
We weren't, but you're right in that case :)
if there were no particles around, at all, then there would be no sound
Anyways, thanks @ssube that was my non-js question of the day.
And my lesson of the day is don't call people space_fags. Even if you don't know what it is and want to be part of the group yourself. It's just not nice
21:07
that's why telescopes and satellites are so insanely big
they have so few particles to pick up (samples to take) that they need a huge surface and a ton of time
My knowledge is far too undeveloped to know what happens in the vacuum we have, as, in the most extreme case, there are at least virtual particles
They form into either matter or antimatter and anihilate each other
No idea if that would be enough to transit sound
at the simplest, I think it's the same idea as a Monte Carlo algorithm uses, where more samples become increasingly detailed
@KamilSolecki trust me, matter<->antimatter annihilation would be loud!
not in space
Good point. For some reason I was thinking of a matter<->antimatter bomb directly above the vatican
21:11
@Vap0r it happens all the time tough. Virtual particles exist due to uncertainty principle, they live for a short time, and pay back their energy when they die
Thus electrons and positons are formed
And they anihillate
That's as far as my knowledge goes
yeah, one or two bumping into each other is supposed to be a pretty normal thing
I guess it depends on scale. But I believe that as far as reactions go, the volume per molecule of an antimatter->matter reaction is the highest because all of the energy is used up.
that's why we never see quantities of antimatter, there's too much matter
they get bumped off right away
if you were to react 5kg of anti with regular matter it would be louder than 5 kg of TNT, 5kg of C4, or 5kg of supercritical fissioning plutonium
what if the regular matter was TNT
21:17
Haha that's actually a really good question
I don't believe it would make a difference since it's not using a chemical reaction to generate the energy. Though I would assume more dense matter would produce more energy, so if TNT is significantly more dense than say a hydrogen molecule AM reaction (it is) then it should produce more energy
that's definitely past what I understand, but TNT's power comes from burning really quick, which a matter/antimatter reaction wouldn't cause
that makes sense, it being based on density (amount of matter) vs what the matter is exactly
two molecules with the same atoms but a different configuration probably wouldn't be hugely different
There is however some really interesting research on using AM reactions to boost nuclear weapon efficiency by an ungodly amount. I don't remember the percentages, but I remember the yield for the same amount of fissile material was multiplied something like 30->50X
meh. We can already knock the earth out of orbit, let's do something interesting now.
Using that to power a tiny robot battery that can go inside of a person would be pretty sweet.
Use some nukes to get to Alfa Centauri rapidly
Not as a spaceship; as a planet
lol
> Hey guys, we're joining your solar system, that cool?
21:22
Ayy lmao come
Currently I think any benefit gained from antimatter reactions is offset because it takes a ridiculous amount of energy to contain without it, ya know, sploding.
Would our atmosphere move with us?
if we were careful
Or do you think the moon would take its' chance to steal our spot and gain an atmosphere?
the moon could come with us, if we did it right
and potentially help counter the nukes or whatever to push us faster
Hasn't the moon taken enough of our shit?
21:24
it's just a matter of our gravity to that thing (moon, atmo) being higher than everyone else's summed + inertia
if we accelerate at < 9m/s and there's no other gravity (from the sun, jupiter, etc, which isn't true), they would follow along
Antimatter catalyzed nuclear pulse propulsion is a variation of nuclear pulse propulsion based upon the injection of antimatter into a mass of nuclear fuel which normally would not be useful in propulsion. The anti-protons used to start the reaction are consumed, so it is a misnomer to refer to them as a catalyst. Traditional nuclear pulse propulsion has the downside that the minimum size of the engine is defined by the minimum size of the nuclear bombs used to create thrust. A conventional nuclear H-bomb design consists of two parts, the primary which is almost always based on plutonium, and a...
lol the title reads like something out of science fiction. Check when it was first theorized.... 92
but it would be like having water on the outside of a water balloon and trying to move it
even if it stuck, it would all go to one side and start to drip off
@ssube that's an amusing thought academically, and a terrorizing one realistically
gaining matter as we went through space would probably be worse
cause this planet is gonna handle like a 7 series
and hit pedestrians about as well as a mustang
> and hit pedestrians about as well as a mustang
I don't know whether this is a positive thing or a negative thing
So bad, for the pedestrian.
And possibly the mustang
things can't get much worse for the driver
:(
Hey do you know if babel knows how to deal with destructuring OOTB?
The thing that always amused me as of scientific terminology cluttered together is the definition of a kallman filter
it should? the es2015+ presets certainly will
21:30
!!wiki Kallman filter
Kalman filtering, also known as linear quadratic estimation (LQE), is an algorithm that uses a series of measurements observed over time, containing statistical noise and other inaccuracies, and produces estimates of unknown variables that tend to be more accurate than those based on a single measurement alone, by using Bayesian inference and estimating a joint probability distribution over the variables for each timeframe. The filter is named after Rudolf E. Kálmán, one of the primary developers of its theory. The Kalman filter has numerous applications in technology. A common application is for...
Not this one I think
I mean not this definition
Unfortunate, they changed it. It used to sound like a thing from Starcraft
Actually not. It's just that the polish definition sounds crazy
 
1 hour later…
22:39
its actually javas cript
and it comes from java the tut's crypt, who is brother of jaba the hut
22:53
@BadgerCat google is showing me Ring ads now. I blame you

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