Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Kurt Feltenberger
(06 Apr 2016 21:47 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Bruce Johnson
(06 Apr 2016 22:29 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Postmark
(06 Apr 2016 22:31 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Craig Berry
(06 Apr 2016 22:37 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Bruce Johnson
(06 Apr 2016 22:50 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Craig Berry
(06 Apr 2016 22:56 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Kelly St. Clair
(07 Apr 2016 00:30 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Kurt Feltenberger
(07 Apr 2016 01:09 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Grimmund
(07 Apr 2016 12:59 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Bruce Johnson
(06 Apr 2016 22:43 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations Tim (07 Apr 2016 02:50 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Michael McKinney
(07 Apr 2016 13:02 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Orffen
(07 Apr 2016 21:31 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Craig Berry
(07 Apr 2016 21:37 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Andrew Long
(07 Apr 2016 21:45 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Craig Berry
(07 Apr 2016 21:53 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Michael McKinney
(08 Apr 2016 04:26 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
shadow@xxxxxx
(08 Apr 2016 00:18 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Detecting Nuclear Detonations
Richard Aiken
(09 Apr 2016 02:47 UTC)
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On Wed, Apr 06, 2016 at 05:46:35PM -0400, Kurt Feltenberger wrote: > Are there any particles or emissions, however faint, known or > theorized, that would allow a sufficiently sensitive sensor to > detect a nuclear detonation (actually, enough to destroy all > civilization on a world of ~7+ billion people in a day) at > interstellar distances either as it happened or within a short (less > than a week or so) period of time? All known and theorized particles involved in nuclear reactions travel at light speed or less. So no. Hypothetical FTL particles are called tachyons. With a big stretch, perhaps they might be produced by nuclear reactions, though there would have to be some reason why the energy or momentum difference isn't detected in experiments. Another possibility is that they might exist as some sort of background radiation ("dark energy"), and nuclear reactions might just interact with them weakly, but enough for a much more advanced civilization to detect with sufficiently sensitive (and probably huge) detectors. All reasonably theorized particles obey relativity, and so causal interactions (such as "nuclear detonations cause detectable results") at FTL speeds implies the usual time-travel paradoxes. - Tim