If the NASA spacecraft met a Quark in time and morphed into a really hot ball of fire?
Karamazov
2011-08-14 12:25:37 UTC
How would Americans watching the NaSA channel, understand it?
Seven answers:
?
2011-08-14 12:35:49 UTC
Supposing that a "quark" was able to be "morphed" into a really hot ball of fire...by say being an actually string in string theory that had some how managed to become extended into observable spatial dimensionality and oscillating at such rates as to produce extreme heat, then NASA would easily recognize this as an event so improbable that it is not likely to ever occur again during the history of the universe.
2011-08-14 19:32:02 UTC
Which NASA spacecraft - you used the word "the" implying a specific craft.
A quark is a subatomic particle that makes up every proton and neutron in matter - so any NASA spacecraft is already full of quarks, and meeting another quark would mean nothing. It would certainly not cause the craft to "morph" into anything.
I am curious why this generation doesn't produce minds with even a smidgen of real science education...
chanljkk
2011-08-14 20:23:30 UTC
Gamma rays had met a NASA spacecraft, in real life. If you meant that, that is a modified question.
campbelp2002
2011-08-14 19:30:48 UTC
Due to a phenomenon known as color confinement, quarks are never directly observed or found in isolation; they can only be found within hadrons. So what you suppose is impossible.
2011-08-14 19:28:55 UTC
There is absolutely no sense in this question.
Not a drop.
A quark is a fundamental particle - you get three in every proton and neutron.
eri
2011-08-14 19:30:12 UTC
Most Americans understand that what you said makes no sense whatsoever. I'd suggest taking a basic physics class.
Satan Claws
2011-08-14 21:19:46 UTC
Why does this generation not produce any minds of exceptional quality?
Because they think that having computers, iPhones and Internet will solve all of their problems without having to work on them.
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