- #1
Brainguy
- 43
- 0
Hi, I'm new to particle physics, and recently became a little bit interested in antimatter. einstein said that energy is just matter in a different form. I came to that conclusion on my own even before reading about E=mc squared, and I wonder: could energy be considered a state of matter? I thought that it was AMAZING that a gram of water could unleash such energy in total annihilation. That would probably mean that energy is the least dense of all states of matter, because if a liquid, which is realetivelly un-dense is equivelent to ALL this energy, it seems pretty tightly packed in comparison. Now imagine we found an endless supply of antimatter on the moon, and mined millions of kilograms of antititanium. Titanium is the most dense material I could think of off the top of my head, so imagine how much energy could be released! we could have our mining robots back on Earth in a week with antititanium to spare! And I thought nuclear bombs were powerful...
well, thanks for listening!
~Brainguy
well, thanks for listening!
~Brainguy