[youtube]5n9xafjynJA[/youtube]
Guess I should by one before the nuclear holocaust
I want to see similar collision simulations happening on spacecrafts in SE.Lately Ive been thoroughly engrossed watching these extremely realistic physics simulations of car crashes. No one was harmed in the making of these videos except a few car manufactures' safety ratings. I hope to see Space Engine match these landscape renderings some day soon too.
[youtube]yIFlQu8o1sQ[/youtube]
If BeamNG wan't considered a meme game, it would show all its power!I want to see similar collision simulations happening on spacecrafts in SE.Lately Ive been thoroughly engrossed watching these extremely realistic physics simulations of car crashes. No one was harmed in the making of these videos except a few car manufactures' safety ratings. I hope to see Space Engine match these landscape renderings some day soon too.
[youtube]yIFlQu8o1sQ[/youtube]
BeamNG is considered a meme game? Didn't know that some people made it into a meme. Or maybe you are just joking about its physics being added for spacecrafts in SE. It would be cool as any other collision stuff in games. Maybe suggest it in suggestions thread? But it won't happen anytime soon as we all know. Or there is already some similar suggestion.If BeamNG wan't considered a meme game, it would show all its power!I want to see similar collision simulations happening on spacecrafts in SE.Lately Ive been thoroughly engrossed watching these extremely realistic physics simulations of car crashes. No one was harmed in the making of these videos except a few car manufactures' safety ratings. I hope to see Space Engine match these landscape renderings some day soon too.
[youtube]yIFlQu8o1sQ[/youtube]
As far as anyone can tell it is exactly the same as normal matter. It is still unknown if normal matter will ever decay anyway, plausible but unknown.
Don't think that is how it works, and if it is I have never heard anything about it.
The antimatter's shelf life as well as the shelf's life would be around a few microseconds. I'd need some Math to figure out the precise number.I wonder what anti-matter's shelf life is? Does it decay at the same rate as normal matter? Is the reason the universe is asymmetrical is because it all fused into Dark Matter? I guess only Math knows.
Theoretically an antimatter particle should have the same decay timescale as its matter particle partner. For example, a positron is the antiparticle of an electron, which as far as we know never decays. In practice, its shelf life depends on the container -- on how well you can confine it and prevent it from annihilating with matter.
No. The annihilation of matter and antimatter shortly after the Big Bang is responsible for releasing an enormous amount of energy in the form of photons, which made the universe radiation dominated. If instead all the antimatter somehow converted to dark matter, then this source of energy would have been removed -- sequestered in the dark matter. The universe would have evolved very differently. It would have skipped the radiation-dominated phase and gone directly to matter-dominated.