Dan Minette wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Robert Seeberger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Killer Bs Discussion" <[email protected]>
> Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2005 8:55 PM
> Subject: Re: Physics question
>
>
>> Kevin Street wrote:
>>> The Fool wrote:
>>>> But what if the apparatus is cooled to very close to absolute 0?
>>>> Like some kind of bose-einstein condensate?
>>>
>>> I suspect that the theoretical lower limit of cooling would still
>>> fall short of the kind of stillness needed to get an interesting
>>> displacement in space. But I don't know, maybe the math would say
>>> different.
>>
>> My take on that question is that at the temperatures needed to 
>> cause
>> such a displacement, the theoretical space probe would lose
>> structural and operational integrity.
>>
>> At very cold temps some kinds of molecular bonds become very weak 
>> and
>> if the displacement transmission is in any way turbulentthe craft
>> just might disintegrate.
>
> Good try, but that's not it.

But is my point accurate? Wouldn't the more complex materials be 
degraded at absolute zero? (To unworkability?)

> You were right about there being no
> absolute space....it's just that even if the Fool properly referred
> to uncertainty in the momentum instead of absolute zero momentum,
> there would still be quite a few problems.  Even at absolute zero,
> the wave function that describes the entire spacecraft has a
> delta-momentum as well as a delta-x. Dan M.

And for an object to have absolute zero momentum in a relativistic 
universe the entire universe and every object in it would also have to 
have absolute zero momentum.

xponent
Memo To The Man Maru
rob 


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