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If you quantum teleport an atom onto another, would it fuse?
Doughboy:
--- Quote from: Mega-Bear on March 17, 2017, 08:32:54 PM ---I don't think you understand. read this. hopefully that makes things clearer.
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pls explain rather than a "really long essay about magnets"
Maxwell.:
--- Quote from: Doughboy on March 17, 2017, 09:20:37 PM ---pls explain rather than a "really long essay about magnets"
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I thought you were exaggerating but then I looked at this
which makes me think he didn't read it himself
PhantOS:
If it was physically possible for matter to overlap with other matter, it would still require more energy than the big bang itself to happen.
the forces between the smallest units of matter are stronger than imaginable
SteveJenkins:
--- Quote from: Mega-Bear on March 17, 2017, 08:32:54 PM ---I don't think you understand. read this. hopefully that makes things clearer.
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ah yes let me just send them "really long essay about magnets" i sure proved them wrong
Juncoph:
--- Quote from: Mega-Bear on March 17, 2017, 06:52:40 PM ---But presumably their nuclei are being overlapped. There would be no way for the atoms to repel. do u even magnets?
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that doesn't work quite how you think it works
the question isn't "can we put a particle in the exact same place as another", the question is "can we put an atom in the exact same place as another" which is a very different question because their positions relative to eachother aren't necessarily aligned, nor are they necessarily identical atoms
i'm willing to bet that in some circumstances, with the right atoms, this could lead to fusion. otherwise it'd probably just lead to both of the atoms repelling by fusing into an incredibly unstable element which would fission immediately after