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Stefan Jones
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09-19-2002 05:04 PM ET (US)
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Oh, swell. Now physics students will be putting little blobs of frozen antimatter on doorknobs. Grab the knob, your body heats the -H2, and BOOM, the campus loses a building.
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Johnny Q
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2
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09-19-2002 07:43 PM ET (US)
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How exactly do you store massive quantities of antimatter? At some point you're going to have to use matter at which time KABOOM!
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chico haas
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3
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09-19-2002 09:22 PM ET (US)
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The article I read reported a bit of skepticism within the physics community. Sort of antielation, I guess.
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| Miles
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4
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09-19-2002 09:29 PM ET (US)
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Can you like, blow up the world, if you collect a bunch of this stuff?
Just curious...no plans.
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lyagushka
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5
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09-20-2002 05:48 AM ET (US)
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Mr. President, we cannot allow an anti-matter gap!
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| Gianni LeMonjello
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6
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09-20-2002 10:05 AM ET (US)
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Make more, please, and blow up the planet. Thank you Mr. Scientists. Keep up the good work.
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| appologetic disclaimer
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7
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09-20-2002 02:30 PM ET (US)
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the article i read about this indicated (admitted) that while they HAVE made "substantial quantities" of anithydrogen - that's only by comparison... the total ammount that this lab has EVER created could power a single lightbulb for something like 15 minutes each day
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| Danr
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8
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09-23-2002 04:44 PM ET (US)
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How many miles per hour can an antimatter engine do?
How much thrust could an antimatter produce if we can perfect the technology?
Why haven't we made an engine to do this yet?
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| Eric
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9
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12-30-2006 04:42 PM ET (US)
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Cool. Now, how long before the Bush administration announces a research initiative for an anti-hydrogen car!?
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