Engineering Antimatter Engines and Electrical Engineering?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the involvement of electrical engineers (EEs) in research related to antimatter engines. Key points highlight the significant challenges in antimatter production and containment, suggesting that practical applications are still far from realization. The consensus indicates that current technology and understanding are insufficient for EEs to engage meaningfully in antimatter engine design. While EEs could contribute to specific components, such as driver circuitry, the foundational physics and complexities of antimatter technology are better suited for physicists at this stage. The conversation emphasizes the need for advancements in antimatter production before considering engineering applications.
Ryuk1990
Messages
157
Reaction score
0
Are there opportunities for EEs to be involved in research on antimatter engines? Considering antimatter engines are heavily based on magnetic principles, is it feasible to assume that antimatter engine design will be a subfield of EE? The gap between EE and theoretical physics is getting smaller.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Ryuk1990 said:
Are there opportunities for EEs to be involved in research on antimatter engines?

No. You are about one century too early.
 
First you have to figure out how to produce antimatter in volume. Next you should consider how one might contain it. Finally, when those two problems are solved we can discuss what kind of engine it might be.

Perhaps you should first figure out how to stay alive and healthy for two centuries and THEN consider whether electrical engineering curricula are appropriate for designing anti-matter engines. :-)
 
If I wanted someone to design an Ion Rocket (presumably what you mean when you write a plasma engine), I would still turn to a physicist first. There are aspects of controlling an ionized plasma that are not really well known among electrical engineers.

But an electrical engineer could design the driver circuitry...
 
Topics in this forum should be confined to Career Guidance, not a discussion on the physics or validity of a physical concept.

Please note that our Global rules still apply in this forum.

Zz.
 

Similar threads

Replies
18
Views
1K
Replies
15
Views
3K
Replies
16
Views
7K
Replies
9
Views
1K
Replies
19
Views
5K
Replies
14
Views
3K
Replies
19
Views
3K
Back
Top