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antiparticle beams


dragonstar57

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if you somehow designed a positron (ignoring all the issues with this statement)

and were in a complete vacuum (like space) and shot it at something the beam would annihilate with the electrons and possibly blowup whatever you are aiming at

but if you had 3 beams (1 firring a positron beam 1 firring a anti neutron beam and one firring a anti-proton (or as some people call it incorrectly a negatron) would it annihilate the whole object.

or would it be beater to just fire 2 intersecting beams one a positron beam and one a electron beam. kind of like the M.D or little doctor in ender's game

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If you destroy all the electrons in a sample via annihilation, you will end up with hot plasma. Without the electrons to hold things together nothing could withstand such a beam. If you use antiprotons in your beam, the same will happen but you will get a radioactive plasma instead.

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The plasma would have gravity, but it would be negligible in effect — the electrostatic interaction is far stronger.

 

The radioactivity would be from the leftover neutrons, which are unstable. However, you'd only have to worry about the neutron decay if you survived the initial barrage from the ~1 GeV gammas from the proton-antiproton annihilation.

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