Could Bose-Einstein Condensates Create Supernova-like Explosions?

AI Thread Summary
A lab team experimenting with Bose-Einstein Condensate created an event resembling a supernova, raising questions about the implications of such phenomena. The experiment involved ultra-cold gas at nearly absolute zero, which resulted in an energetic explosion that scattered and ionized atoms. While the term "supernova" suggests destruction, the event is more of an analog rather than a true supernova, similar to other recent analogs like black hole event horizons created with sound. Concerns about potential weaponization are discussed, but the consensus leans towards the event being a scientific curiosity rather than a new weapon of mass destruction. Overall, the findings highlight the complexities of quantum physics and its experimental manifestations.
Kalrag
Messages
104
Reaction score
0
I was surfing the web and came across where a lab team was messing around with Bose-Einstein Condensate and created what seemed to be a supernova.

Here is the link. http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/generalscience/supernova_lab_010723.html

Does anyone on have any idea how this might happen? And if we learned enough about it what could it be used for?

When you here the word supernova the first thing that comes to mind is distruction. Could this be the key to the next new weapon of mass destruction?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Physics news on Phys.org
Most likely, it's just an analog. Similar analogs have been done recently like analog of a black hole event horizon using sound, etc. Doesn't really happen like full size things just looks and behaves similar.
 
Kalrag said:
I was surfing the web and came across where a lab team was messing around with Bose-Einstein Condensate and created what seemed to be a supernova.

Here is the link. http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/generalscience/supernova_lab_010723.html

Does anyone on have any idea how this might happen? And if we learned enough about it what could it be used for?

When you here the word supernova the first thing that comes to mind is distruction. Could this be the key to the next new weapon of mass destruction?

They had a few hundred atoms of ultra-cold gas, a 3 billionths of a degree above absolute zero, tenuously held in a magnetic trap. The explosion was energetic enough to scatter atoms out of their trap and ionize/neutralize some of them so the instruments couldn't track them. It took extremely sensitive and precise instrumentation to even determine that something had happened.

You have far more to fear from the dirt-clod bomb.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks

Similar threads

Back
Top