Bose Condensate question
Posted: Fri Oct 03, 2008 6:55 pm
1) Newbie to this board.
2) Engineering background in a totally different field. Just an interested spectator here.
3) Most appreciative of the generally even handed dialog on this board.
4) I have an itching curiosity regarding Bose supernova if someone cares to educate me. There isn’t much I can access that makes sense on this topic (mostly just the goofy speculations around the LHC that brought this to my attention). Mea culpa if this too is obvious or silly, implosion descriptions notwithstanding I’m pretty sure the supernova label doesn’t really mean there is a fusion process going on: Is the missing matter in the Bose supernova remnant somehow released as energy, or is it thought to have just gone away somewhere? If the former, are we able to reproducibly create Bose Supernova events? If so, is there a snowball’s chance of breakeven energy?
Thanks in advance. I’m awaiting developments in the news forum of this board with the same bated breath as everyone else.
2) Engineering background in a totally different field. Just an interested spectator here.
3) Most appreciative of the generally even handed dialog on this board.
4) I have an itching curiosity regarding Bose supernova if someone cares to educate me. There isn’t much I can access that makes sense on this topic (mostly just the goofy speculations around the LHC that brought this to my attention). Mea culpa if this too is obvious or silly, implosion descriptions notwithstanding I’m pretty sure the supernova label doesn’t really mean there is a fusion process going on: Is the missing matter in the Bose supernova remnant somehow released as energy, or is it thought to have just gone away somewhere? If the former, are we able to reproducibly create Bose Supernova events? If so, is there a snowball’s chance of breakeven energy?
Thanks in advance. I’m awaiting developments in the news forum of this board with the same bated breath as everyone else.