Pun intended, but still a serious question.

Would a neutron matter? (Pun also intended, but also serious)

    • Xaphanos@lemmy.world
      211·
      5 months ago

      By my back-of-the -envelope math it is 4,500,000,000 joules. The Hiroshima bomb is listed at approximately 10,000,000,000,000 joules. I bet xkcd is far more accurate, though.

      • MartianSands@sh.itjust.works
        221·
        5 months ago

        How did you calculate that? The question didn’t even mention a specific speed, just “near the speed of light”.

        The kinetic energy for a grain of sand near the speed of light is somewhere between “quite a lot” and “literally infinity” (which is, in a sense, the reason you can’t actually reach light speed without a way to supply infinite energy).

        • Xaphanos@lemmy.world
          19·
          5 months ago

          Ke=1/2 M V^2 Not relativistic. So wildly low. But certainly a low bound. My point being that nuclear bomb grade energy is certainly in the ballpark.

      • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
        8·
        5 months ago

        Did you assume the sand as having no velocity relative to the object going C?