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#1
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If a bit of neutron star material (say, 1 inch in diameter) were
to enter Earth's atmosphere, would it lose the same percentage of its mass that other metallic meteorites do? Rick |
#2
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No. Otoh, absent of gravity, such fragment will explode long before getting
here. And even if possible, such dense object will cause nuclear explosions while going through earth. My guess would be that it will be several thoughsand nuclear bombs exploding continuously. "Rick" wrote in message ... If a bit of neutron star material (say, 1 inch in diameter) were to enter Earth's atmosphere, would it lose the same percentage of its mass that other metallic meteorites do? Rick |
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Could you explain the "absent of gravity" comment? Would a
1-inch chuck of neutron star material not have gravity? Or are you saying such a small piece couldn't exist at all? "onegod" wrote in message ... No. Otoh, absent of gravity, such fragment will explode long before getting here. And even if possible, such dense object will cause nuclear explosions while going through earth. My guess would be that it will be several thoughsand nuclear bombs exploding continuously. "Rick" wrote in message ... If a bit of neutron star material (say, 1 inch in diameter) were to enter Earth's atmosphere, would it lose the same percentage of its mass that other metallic meteorites do? Rick |
#4
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It would have a mass of "only" 15 x 10^15 grams (15 billion tonnes)
which probably isn't large enough to hold it together, even though its surface gravity would be much higher than the same mass of normal matter. I _think_ it would disperse into free neutrons which would then decay. Which raises the interesting question of whether asteroid-mass chunks could be thrown out of a supernova explosion and be stable. A mass the same as Pallas (2.3 x 10^23 grams - it's the first one I could find) would only be about 6 meters across, if I've done my sums right. Of course the chance of it actually hitting anything is infinitesimal. In message , Rick writes Could you explain the "absent of gravity" comment? Would a 1-inch chuck of neutron star material not have gravity? Or are you saying such a small piece couldn't exist at all? "onegod" wrote in message .. . No. Otoh, absent of gravity, such fragment will explode long before getting here. And even if possible, such dense object will cause nuclear explosions while going through earth. My guess would be that it will be several thoughsand nuclear bombs exploding continuously. "Rick" wrote in message ... If a bit of neutron star material (say, 1 inch in diameter) were to enter Earth's atmosphere, would it lose the same percentage of its mass that other metallic meteorites do? Rick -- Rabbit arithmetic - 1 plus 1 equals 10 Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
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