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Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by ImportantNobody
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It depends on how fast she can clench the eggs out, which will be at least the speed of a bullet (likely very much faster), and with the size of an egg that's a whole lot of force behind the antimatter. What do you guys think that could do if it fired into the Earth, taking the very low estimate of bullet speed?
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by GreivousKhan
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Beta said
Well duh.POST 5000!


Gezh, I don't think any other RP had such an unbalance of OOC post to IC post.

Also how do you tell that?
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by yoshua171
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Says it at the top next to the "OOC" tab.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Salroka
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ImportantNobody said
It depends on how fast she can clench the eggs out, which will be at least the speed of a bullet (likely very much faster), and with the size of an egg that's a whole lot of force behind the antimatter. What do you guys think that could do if it fired into the Earth, taking the very low estimate of bullet speed?


We already calculated the power of antimatter explosions by weight of antimatter.

1kg of antimatter explodes with what, 21.5mt of force? So an average antimatter egg would likely hit with around 3 to 5mt of force. If we're talking facts here.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by yoshua171
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Unless those eggs are incredibly fucking dense.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by ImportantNobody
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Doesn't it matter what speed it's going? Or I guess antimatter is special in it's calculations of force.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by GreivousKhan
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ImportantNobody said
Doesn't it matter what speed it's going? Or I guess antimatter is special in it's calculations of force.


Your force is special!
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Salroka
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An odd bit of logic from a non-chickener.

Yes, a densified antimatter egg would increase the yield. But antimatter is incredibly unstable unless held in a very specific type of electromagnetic field. Even were the chicken in question capable of generating such a field, how would it then transfer to the egg once it leaves the chicken? Hogwash, I say.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by ImportantNobody
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It does stand to reason that an egg filed with antimatter could weigh more then a normal egg unless it was a normal egg that she just changed to anti-matter, but she might as well fill it more dense then what normal eggs are made of.

EDIT:The field is in the shell, silly.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Salroka
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ImportantNobody said
The field is in the shell, silly.




That said, I would still say that a 3 ounce egg could likely only contain around 15 to 20kg of densified antimatter. This is of course due to the maximum power capable of being contained within the eggshell field generator. Still, an explosion of 300 to 425mt is very significant.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by ImportantNobody
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Not planet obliterating as I hoped she could be, but yes, significant all the same. Of course she could wipe out all life on a planet with just her nuclear egg rapid firing while she was in orbit above it. That would be the quickest way due to the longer antimatter reload speed, which would be overkill but not overkill enough for worldwide destruction in a single blow.

EDIT: The power would have to be upgraded to around 100,000,000 mt to destroy most life in a single go.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Salroka
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ImportantNobody said
Of course she could wipe out all life on a planet with just her nuclear egg rapid firing while she was in orbit above it. The power would have to be upgraded to around 100,000,000 mt to destroy most life in a single go.


Nay. If one fired a volley of several dozen nuclear eggs, each with roughly 40mt to 50mt of power, the combined salvo would be a few thousand megatons. This would be more than sufficient to wipe most sapient life from a planet, plus the fallout of such a barrage killing the remnants over the next several days.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by So Boerd
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No, one kilogram blows up with 53 megatons. It annihilates not only itself, but a kilogram of matter.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by So Boerd
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Also, not force, energy.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Salroka
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So Boerd said
Also, not force, energy.


Same general idea, man. That much energy being unleashed exerts an equal amount of force.

Newton's Law, bitch.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by So Boerd
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Definitely not. Force is mass times acceleration. Energy is mass times velocity squared.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Green
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..Remind me never to use anything larger than demolition charges next time I carry explosives. Too much math for my taste :/
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Schradinger
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So Boerd said
No, one kilogram blows up with 53 megatons. It annihilates not only itself, but a kilogram of matter.


How do you get 53 megatons out of that? 21.5 x 2 = 43.

Though that's not how it works anyway. The kilogram of antimatter collides with the kilogram of matter and they both annihilate each other to produce an explosion with 21.5 megatons of force. The explosion (and calculation of force) happens after they're combined, not before.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by So Boerd
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Not terribly. Just mass times the speed of light squared.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by So Boerd
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2 times the speed of light squared is 1.79751036 × 10^17 joules. That in megatons is 43.
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