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05:37
You'd probably just experience regular gravity
 
2 hours later…
07:55
@AndyD273 If it's stationary (IE just hanging) you get regular gravity. It's not as strong as surface gravity (obviously) but it's still up past 90%, IIRC.
'outside the gravity well' isn't a thing. If there's just you and Earth in the whole universe then you will always feel earth's gravity, it just drops off to being negligible. The only way you can get around it it by going fast enough sideways to keep missing the earth (orbit) or fast enough upwards that the force pulling you back diminishes faster than the distance you get away (escape velocity)
Does anyone know if in DnD 5e you roll for damage once per target or just once overall to determine hail of thorns damage?
Does the spell say once in it?
ah. Looks like once
PHB p196
Thanks.
A rare case of general rules winning!
And now: To go to work.... :(
@AndyD273 I just realised I misread your question as 'If my mountain were hanging in space'...
 
6 hours later…
13:35
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Questions

Pcm979Q: Military branch organization in soft Sci-Fi I'm trying to build a military for a soft Sci-Fi universe that's in a state of near total war. Thousands of worlds are being fought over by highly mobile military forces where all branches of the military would be operating in close support of each ...

14:04
@Hotkeys Yeah, that sounds right. Unless the top of the mountain is far enough up that it is above geosynchronous orbit
@JoeBloggs Yeah no, just tall enough that the top is outside of the atmosphere, to basically what you would start to consider as space.
15:02
0
A: Sandbox for Proposed Questions

Shard martinwhat's the best way to preserve a dead soul? The souls doesn't ascend to heaven after death. Over the course of a person's life, the soul builds certain connections to the body that it inhabits. It remains attached to it after the body dies, but in a comatose-like state. The soul is preserved in...

15:23
Mornin wubbers.
@James morning
@James grmpf
@dot_Sp0T Whats up grumbly?
@ajnatorixzersolar Mornin.
@James you apparently :D
Also updog is acting up right now -.-
@James Morning James. I have bad news. One 50 mile high mountain sitting on top of another 50 mile high mountain still isn't going to be above geosynchronous orbit, and so won't float away with Nex on it.
@dot_Sp0T Is it going to bother you if no one finishes the joke?
15:35
@AndyD273 I was only testing the waters, it's like holding your feet into an empty pool - it bothers you somewhat that they don't get wet, but secretly you expected it all along
So disappointing and makes you look silly?
It makes you realize that the world goes round with or without you :)
Better than diving into an empty pool at least
Depends on your goals
is your goal to be shorter?
15:38
True. I mean, if your goal is to win gold in the Paralympics then it might be worth it.
So I think I came up with a really good laymans explanation for the Higgs field.
@ajnatorixzersolar god forbid! no
@AndyD273 shoot (I've no idea what a Higgs field is, so if I get it your explanation must be good)
@dot_Sp0T Ok, so the Higgs boson does not give atoms mass, as some reports have said. Instead what gives atoms mass is how they interact with the Higgs field. The Higgs field is a quantum field that is everywhere all the time. Think of it like the ocean. Some atoms, say hydrogen, are like hydrofoils. They only weakly interact with the surface of the ocean, don't get much drag, and so don't have much mass.
2
Other atoms, like plutonium, are like supertankers. They interact very strongly with the Higgs field, and so have a lot more mass. Photons are massless. they are like seagulls, floating along above the surface and not interacting with it at all.
15:56
@AndyD273 What if we push him a bit...like...with a catapult?
2
@dot_Sp0T Here's another explanation proposed by someone that is probably smarter than me:
@James I'm thinking you'd need some kind of magnetic linear accelerator. If you made a hyperloop style tube starting at the bottom of the mountains going up past the top of the atmosphere and evacuated the air, then used all 100 miles of length to get it up to speed, you could probably get Nex into orbit. But not the mountain.
16:13
@AndyD273 I’m trying to work through some fun mathematics for an unusual universe where mass comes in a variety of flavours, which actually matches their interactions with various fields. It’s quite tricky!
@AndyD273 I guess you could actively support the mountain?
@JoeBloggs I mean I don't think you could accelerate the 50 mile high mountain enough to get it into orbit without divine intervention, magic, or a lot of explosive force.
@AndyD273 aaah, that’s the trick. Inside the mountain is actually just a load of magnetic loop struts: the outer skin is just thick enough to look like mountain. If you take a geologists hammer you can make the whole thing echo.
@JoeBloggs I kind of wonder if a theory of everything will come out of the idea that all of the fundamental forces are actually fields, and then someone just needs do the math to figure out how the fields interact. So Higgs/gravity field, EM field, Weak Atomic field, strong atomic field... Or something like that.
that would actually be really quite cool...
though I think you just described quite a lot of quantum mechanics.
16:31
@JoeBloggs So if the Higgs boson is actually just a ripple in the Higgs field, then the other bosons are probably ripples in other fields. Bosons are what bind quarks together to make protons and neutrons, so the idea that they are responsible for the strong and weak forces make sense. I get that these are probably well considered ideas for physicists, but I've only been thinking about it since this morning so I have a lot of catching up to do. :)
Shower thoughts: when your brain is looking for any excuse to stay in the warm water for just a few more minutes.
@AndyD273 We should probably just ask Nex
@NexTerren How would you prefer to be launched into space. Rail-gun or Catapult?
16:51
@AndyD273 yeah, you should look into quantum mechanics. It’s been a while since I thought about it but I think the way quantum mechanics treats degenerate matter is a good introduction to treating mass not as points but as waves in a field of likelihood’s for where a particle might be. Turns out there’s no real physical distinction between the field of likelihood’s and an actual field: it’s just nicer to think in discrete objects rather than partly imaginary wave functions.
@James Could be... I think rail gun has an advantage in that you could technically start at a lower acceleration and build up, and so be less likely to turn you into jelly. But maybe the same could work for a catapult. Someone should calculate the size of the arm needed and to reach escape velocity while staying under 10G's.
Except where it isn’t. The QM description of a photon passing through three polarising plates at 45 degrees to each other is still one of the most amazing pieces of maths I think I’ve ever had the pleasure of revising. It’s simultaneously complex, astonishingly simple, and perfectly describes an intuitively impossible real phenomenon.
@JoeBloggs Yeah, it's kind of a side interest of mine, but I don't have the math skill needed to really get into it. It does make me wonder though... if particles are essentially waves in a field, is there anything stopping you from creating particles out of nothing simply by exciting the right fields in the right ways? (Other than the fact that we don't know how to do that, of course)
So if we could create the right waves in the right way to make our own particles, then matter could be created from nothing one quantum particle at a time, so a quantum 3D printer with no feed stock, and voilà! You have a Star Trek style replicator.
The first model took 10 years and a billion dollars to make a cup of tea. It might have been Earl Grey, but it wasn't hot.
@AndyD273 ever heard of the quantum foam? It’s exactly that. Particles are capable of jumping up energy levels, and mathematically allowed to jump down energy levels, spontaneously. Particle/antiparticle pairs are allowed to pop into existence at random, essentially as fluctuation in the mathematical description of their probabilities of being (which is equivalent to a field). I simplify, and there’s a lot more to this than I know, I know, but... yeah. Science!
@JoeBloggs Right. That's kind of what I was thinking, except induced instead of completely random, and lasting longer than a millionth of a second.
17:08
@AndyD273 well, therein lies the rub. Same but of maths that shows how those virtual particles can exist also shows why they have a maximum lifetime. It’s theoretically possible to get around, but it needs some serious sci-fi handwaving.
Which is the downside to science. It’s very cool and then dashes your dreams on rocks of mathematical modelling.
@AndyD273 ...someone really needs to do this.
 
1 hour later…
18:31
@AndyD273 We call this... A Laser! :P
(OK, it's more complicated than that, to be fair)
It's also similar to the ideas of Spontaneous Parametric Down Conversion, where e.g. an atom in a crystal absorbs a photon of laser light and emits 2 photons of a different wavelength. It's a different type of 'field' but the same idea
18:48
@AndyD273 isn't mass due to the number of protons?
18:59
@AndyD273 This is known as 'second quantisation' and leads to things like QED and QCD, which are subsets of Quantum Field Theory (QFT, quite different to a 'Quantum Fourier Transform', which is also a QFT). This solves things, except for gravity, which can't be renormalised and so the numbers just become infinite and it's suddenly impossible to solve things with gravity involved
"the math[s] to figure out how the fields interact" is known as The Standard Model
unfortunately, it turns out that things aren't quite so simple (even ignoring gravity) and neutrinos oscillate between different 'flavours' (think different variants of the same particle), which can't be explained by the Standard Model and so, we need physics beyond the Standard Model to explain this as well as some way to explain quantum gravity.
The most well known of these is String Theory, but this has numerous issues. The next most well known is Loop Quantum Gravity, which makes more intuitive sense to me, but progress is slow
19:22
@dot_Sp0T No and yes? Technically speaking yes, the more protons, the more mass, But the mass doesn't come from the protons. The more protons, the more it interacts with the Higgs field, and so more mass. I am not a physicist, I just read a lot, so take that with a bit of salt. :)
@AndyD273 @dot_Sp0T This is true, but most of the mass of atoms and protons actually comes from quarks interacting with the Strong force
@Mithrandir24601 quarks, strings, now you're talking science...
@Mithrandir24601 What can't lasers do? Just read about a new method of creating photonic matter using a laser. And the photons even got a little mass once they were entangled.
19:42
You know, you guys talk advanced physics and I am learning about Taylor series' at Uni...
@AndyD273 It's interesting: laser light is a quantum state (technically, is taken as an initially coherent state that decoheres, hence terms like 'coherence length'), however, it doesn't violate the Bell/CHSH inequality by itself, so doesn't do a lot of the 'quantum 2.0' stuff (along the lines of 'build a quantum computer'), but is necessary for a lot of said quantum 2.0 stuff
@dot_Sp0T You have to start somewhere! Keep it up :)
@Mithrandir24601 but I don't wanna :(
I wanna make video games
In that case, go into computer science, get good at relevant parts, then make computer games ;)
@Mithrandir24601 but I'm already studying compsci :(
that's the whole issue innit?^^
@dot_Sp0T Then keep going :P
19:45
@Mithrandir24601 but it's boring
@Mithrandir24601 Here's the basic info article: engadget.com/2018/02/19/new-light-form-quantum-computers
@DaaaahWhoosh YOU'RE ALIVE @DaaaahWhoosh
!!! :D
@AndyD273 I was asked how I'd get photons to interact as part of my PhD interview :P
@Mithrandir24601 did the way you suggested work?
@AndyD273 I just gave lots of reasons that it was difficult :)
19:50
@Mithrandir24601 but then I'd have to apply for studying in a foreign country, also I'd have to get a scholarship or similar to pay for it :/
@Mithrandir24601 Ah, well, if they ever ask you again, now you'll have an answer I guess
(although the way that my thinking was heading would have been non-linear effects in e.g. silicon)
(although maybe silicon's a particularly bad example)
Not as bad as silicone... I do remember reading about the first time they managed this
and I could be wrong... silicone could be the magic that they are missing. I think the real solution is to just shine lasers at more things.
We need to shine lasers at ALL THE THINGS.
3
Imagine people with high powered lasers all over the country, driving in cars like the google street-view ones but with lasers on top
20:08
oh wait, you only called my name twice, never mind
@DaaaahWhoosh Niiii haoo!!!! :D
I just have a picture of a giant concert laser show...
Gaa, my eye!
@Mithrandir24601 ah, there it is. Now I've been summoned. Hello!
Whoooooooooosh!
How are you?
@dot I am reasonably well, how have you been during my absence?
20:14
@DaaaahWhoosh I... managed. I am happy to see that you did not fully abandon us but just took a time-out, it feels good reading you again!
Also I gotta work tomorrow so I'm already off again; see you folks o/
 
2 hours later…
22:00
@DaaaahWhoosh \o
 
1 hour later…
23:17
hey there @DaaaahWhoosh @James
hey as well @Mithrandir24601

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