Maybe it was in a Vegetable Glycerin reference.
Comment on what really happened to the Titanic
CapuccinoCoretto@lemmy.world 1 month agoYou’re not thinking big enough. ;)
Chakravanti@monero.town 1 month ago
Comment on what really happened to the Titanic
CapuccinoCoretto@lemmy.world 1 month agoYou’re not thinking big enough. ;)
Maybe it was in a Vegetable Glycerin reference.
LurkingLuddite@piefed.social 1 month ago
Nah, there’s literally not enough nukes or even fissile material to make an Earth-shattering bomb. It takes a lot of energy to shatter something the size of Earth.
AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world 1 month ago
If you blow it up on the surface or in the atmosphere, sure. Blow up a 10 gigaton device, which we absolutely can make and have the materials to do so, buried as deep as you can possibly get it, so about 1.5-1.6 miles in the crust, and you’re gonna wreck a significant portion of a hemisphere.
LurkingLuddite@piefed.social 1 month ago
lol no. Genuinely, no. You are a clueless fool playing with numbers you cannot comprehend.
CapuccinoCoretto@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Not enough fissile material on earth. With enough asteroid and planetary mining, and … ah never mind. You are probably still right. "Shattering means breaking apart and defeating earth’s gravity well.
We’ll have to get started on antimatter bombs for the required energy density, I guess.
LurkingLuddite@piefed.social 1 month ago
Correct. Even with perfect conversion of mass to energy, it would still take converting the mass equivalent of a 16+ km asteroid directly into energy.
Even antimatter explosions are not anywhere near 100% efficient. They produce many subatomic particles with high energy. Much of the reaction will quickly (on the order of 1x10^-18 seconds) settle into neutrinos or electrons. About half of the energy would nigh-instantly convert to neutrinos. Neutrinos will not care even if they’re produced in the Earth’s core.
CapuccinoCoretto@lemmy.world 1 month ago
What are your recomendations? Assuming Earth had to be shattered in a kaboom.
AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Deep core mining is the real tech we need. Blow up a 10 gigaton device on the surface and you’ll melt a hemisphere of the upper layer of the crust, bury that baby 5,000 miles into the planet and blow it up? The Earth is gonna need help opening it’s ketchup bottles for a few billion years until it reforms.
LurkingLuddite@piefed.social 1 month ago
lol no. 10 gigatons is a yawn to the Earth. It’s still 14 orders of magnitute too weak to blow up the Earth. That’s trillions of times less than what it would take to “blow up” the Earth, and 10000x less than Chicxulub, which the Earth already survived.