h a l f b a k e r yNot so much a thought experiment as a single neuron misfire.
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I think it won't work. Consider a lightning bolt's effect on
air --the air expands away from the bolt, creating a near-
vacuum, and very very quickly fills that vacuum when the
bolt is done (causing thunder). There won't be time to
make significant use of that vacuum corridor. |
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Let's suppose a typical air molecule at STP moves at a few hundred metres per second (I read that somewhere, it might not be right). |
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Then you have a few hundredths of a second to take advantage of a 1 metre wide (that's a lot of laser) rarified-air column before it collapses. |
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The hard part is that the bottom-pinch effect would proceed along the length of the column at around light-speed. (That's how fast the tail end of your laser light-beam recedes from you into the distance, right?) |
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Therefore, to make said bottom-pinch work for you, not against you, your projectile has to be moving at light speed already, pre-pinch. |
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Apart from that, er, yeah, eminently practical. |
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STP fortunately only applies when the temperature and
pressure are standard. So the speed of sound, and the
collapse of the column will be slower at altitude? |
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Edit: seems that the speed of sound depends on
temperature, not pressure. It's just that in our local
environment it usually gets colder as we go up. |
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If Vernon and Ling are both right one would predict that
lightning could shoot materials up the low pressure path: a
jet of dust propelled up above the level of the bolt. |
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I think I need a diagram to understand what you're
proposing here. |
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//Laser shockwave accelerator// |
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Sounds like a new computer graphics card. |
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On second reading, I think I understand it. But I don't see
why contracting gas will push on something; isn't it usually
expanding gas that does that? |
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Sounds like Rudolph's red nose. //eminently practical// |
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