MrDudeMan
Lifer
- Jan 15, 2001
- 15,069
- 94
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Originally posted by: mercanucaribe
Originally posted by: MrDudeMan
Originally posted by: Howard
The magnetic field probably keeps the plasma contained.Originally posted by: nboy22
My question is, How would it not melt everything around it at that temperature?
this is exactly why it didnt melt anything. remember people - temperature is a measure of kinetic energy. if the ions dont touch anything, they will not transfer any of their kinetic energy to the material around them.
there are other ways to contain plasma but the most prominent is non-uniform magnetic fields.
odin, plasma is by nature a high thermal energy state, so it was at that temperature for longer than just a little while.
What about radiation?? The sun isn't touching the earth is it?
understanding what radiation is and how it is effected in a magnetic field is not a trivial issue. radiation is the emission of photons because of particle collisions, electron decay, alpha decay, etc. at such high temperatures, the plasma is undoubtedly emittig at least soft xrays, but more than likely hard xrays to gamma rays.
at that point, you need to know some quantum mechanics to understand the barrier presented by the energy of the field and the steel. the transmission and reflection coefficients of each of the aforementioned barriers will bounce a lot of the radiation off, but also pass a lot of it. they account for this in the design.