[meteorite-list] Neutron and Proton productioninhyper-velocityimpacts

mexicodoug mexicodoug at aol.com
Sat Dec 29 10:15:13 EST 2007


Hi Darren and friends,

I think your geometry is mostly fine though there is an easier way to check 
the nuclear reaction asserted, left in the wake of the meteoroid.  It's more 
accurate and you don't even need to truncate the atmosphere:

Try this:

Km^2 "nuclear reactor" meteoroid=Pi*.5^2
=0.785

Km^2 Earth shell=4*Pi*6383^2
=512,000,000

ratio= 1 to 652,000,000

So we agree (you got 660,000,000) whether you make long cylinders and 
subtract spheres and cut the atmosphere, or just look at the area as above. 
Your number has over 1% less 14-C because you assumed the atmosphere mass 
was equally dense from sea level to the top, but in reality the atmosphere 
is creamier near the center of the cake but only frosting at the edges. 
Considering half of the atmosphere is under about 6 km height or even lower 
if you make it colder,  5 km is much more averaged estimate and a whole lot 
less thinking and math.  Maybe I should have used 4 or 6 km, but between 3-8 
km gives the same answer, so that's totally moot.

Oh.  But there is a minor error in the balancing these nuclear reactions 
which you're not going to like, I'm surprised Sterling didn't have his 
thinking cap on when he answered you.  12-Carbon isn't being converted to 
14-C according to this black-box scheme - it is the 14-Nitrogen that is.  I 
don't memorize the atmospheric ratio of nitrogen to carbon off-hand, but I 
suspect it is greater than 7000 to 1.  So, at your 100% conversion, you're 
off by a factor that should have, say, 7000 times more 14-C in your reality 
check.

There are so many things wrong with this model at this point, I'm just gonna 
sigh rather than say what I really think of hypotheses made in a one 
dimensional world to solve three dimensional problems.  And this post has 
nothing to do with the big Mmm-word.

Best wishes,
Doug


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Darren Garrison" <cynapse at charter.net>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Friday, December 28, 2007 3:35 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Neutron and Proton 
productioninhyper-velocityimpacts


> On Fri, 28 Dec 2007 14:09:36 -0600, you wrote:
>
>>the Hulk comic character!  I am the first to respect a thought experiment:
>>But what scientific experiment could you propose (or has one already been
>>done?) to follow through?
>
> Okay, I've done a bit of thought experiment on this too-- and bear with me
> because though hard math has never been my strong suit, I think I have 
> this
> right.
>
> Okay, let's just for a moment imagine that a hypervelocity bolide DOES 
> generate
> C14.  Let's say that a 100 meter bolide converts 100 percent of all carbon 
> into
> C14 in a column 1,000 meters in diameter.  For the sake of simple math, 
> let's
> say that the top of the atmosphere is defined as 100 km up
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K%C3%A1rm%C3%A1n_line and the bolide came in 
> at a
> 90 degree angle.  That hypothetical meteoroid would convert all the C to 
> C14 in
> a volume of around 78.5 km3 by the formula for the volume of a cylinder 
> being
> pi*r2*h.
>
> Now, to determine the volume of the atmosphere, I took a figure for the 
> diameter
> of the Earth as 12,756 km.  I then added the 100 km for the atmosphere on 
> either
> side to get a figure of 12,956 km for the Earth plus the atmosphere.  Then
> plugged both numbers into the formula for the volume of a sphere, 
> 4/3*pi*r3.
> Subtracted the second from the first to get the volume of the Earth's
> atmosphere, 51,924,386,581 km3.
>
> So, after all that, you take the volume of the Earth's atmosphere, compare 
> it to
> the volume of C14 converted atmosphere in that hypothetical column of air
> created by the bolide, and you get around 1.51*10e-9 of the Earth's 
> atmosphere
> converted, or around 1 part in 660,000,000.
>
> Earth diameter = 12,756 km
> Earth volume = 1,086,783,833,910 km3
>
> Earth+a diameter = 12,956 km
> Earth+a volume = 1,138,708,220,492 km3
>
> Atmosphere volume = 51,924,386,581 km3
>
> meteoroid path = 78.53975 km3
>
> 1.51*10e-9
>
> 660,000,000
> ______________________________________________
> http://www.meteoritecentral.com
> Meteorite-list mailing list
> Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
> 




More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list