Why This Stuff Costs $2700 Trillion Per Gram - Antimatter at CERN
Thanks to CERN, Elise Wursten, Loïc Bommersbach and Sarah Charley
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Current estimate of Antimatter, courtesy of Elise:
Stefan Ulmer made a back-of-the-envelope calculation based on energy and power consumption. The explanation goes as follows:
1. CERN produces 3e7 antiprotons per AD cycle or about 1e15 per year
2. This is about 1e15*1.67e-27kg = 1.67 nanogram per year
3. 1 gram of antiprotons has an energy (E=mc^2) of 9e13 Joule
4. The efficiency of the antiproton production process is 1e-9, so you need a billion times more energy: 9e22 Joule
5. The cost of power for CERN is 1kWh = 3.6e6 Joule = 0.1 euro
6. So that would make 0.1/3.6e6*9e22 = 2.5e15 euro
7. And it would take CERN 6e8 years
https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/ca... (1999)
https://nuclearsecrecy.com/nukemap/ - you can see the nuke city
Mass of Fish: "Contribution of Fish to the Marine Inorganic Carbon Cycle" http://rsmas.miami.edu/groups/grosell...
https://web.archive.org/web/201201050...
Dirac’s attitude about the positive solution to his equation https://www.newscientist.com/article/...
Dave’s Essay: http://multimidia.ufrgs.br/conteudo/f...
Questions at CERN
https://public-archive.web.cern.ch/en...
Creating Antihidrogen:
https://home.cern/science/physics/ant...
https://public-archive.web.cern.ch/en...
There’s a factory in Europe that makes antimatter! It’s the rarest, most expensive, and potentially the most dangerous material on earth. Scientists don’t know why this material is so rare. Anti-atoms took 72 years after we discovered antimatter to make. Why?