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Quark Matter Blamed for Paired 1993 Seismic Events

Ethanon writes "In an article posted by BBC, scientists have suggested that two "unassociated" seismic events that occurred in 1993 were actually strange Quark matter passing through the Earth at a speed of perhaps 250 miles per second. A spec of strange Quark matter the size of a human cell is said to be so dense that it could weigh a tonne! Check it out "

7 of 366 comments (clear)

  1. Old News... by Ironix · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think this was posted before.

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  2. Link to original paper by abhinavnath · · Score: 5, Informative

    tconnors(UID #91126) posted a link to the original paper, the last time this was posted on /.

    Not to karma whore or anything :), but this is a fascinating paper. They talk about how Strange Quark Nuggets contain strange, up and down quarks, which makes them stable enough to exist without condensing into protons and neutrons. It also talks about how SQNs are dark matter candidates - so these paired seismic events may be proof of this form of dark matter.

    This seems like an amazing amount of work - they went through nearly 10 million seismic event records, from 1981 to 1993.

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  3. Re:I don't think so. by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 5, Informative
    There is almost no experimental proofs for quantum field theory
    How about the prediction of the anomalous electron magnetic moment to quite a few decimal places? That prediction uses QFT.

    And there is no reasonable argument for the choice of 11 dimensions
    What does that have to do with it? QFT works in 4 dimensions. Are you confused between QFT and supersymmetric QFT? And strangeness has nothing to do with supersymmetry. I think you should go back to your mathematics.

    Hmmm...and I've never heard of Yang-Chibara manifolds and they aren't mentioned anywhere in arxiv.org.

    OK, I've been succesfully trolled.

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  4. Not a whole hell of a lot. by RatBastard · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sure, it's heavy. Sure, it's going really fast. But the impact area is only the size of a cell. It would rupture cells along the path through your body, but the holes created wouldn't be big enough for blood to flow out of, and unless it struck a nerve cell you'd never feel it. The mass is not high enough for it to have any tidal effects. Even if it did hit your brain it probably wouldn't do enough damage to register.

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    1. Re:Not a whole hell of a lot. by pVoid · · Score: 5, Informative
      You're not really taking into account that this thing has seismic effects felt around the globe.

      It's like saying f'(x) = df/dx is 0 because df is almost zero... you are neglecting the very important fact that dx is almost zero too.

      To apply it back to this case: (a previous post mentionned it too) if that thing weighed only a gram, but was traveling at the speed of light, you'd probably vaporize from the energy it would release in you. In the same veine, if it were traveling at reasonable speeds, weighed only 1kg, but the impact point was concentrated into one square nanometer, the damage done might just as well rupture every single cell in your body.

      Another example is icebergs, those giants move at something like 2-3 km/h, but the energy they would release if they hit a oil-platform is greater than the energy a 747 would if it were to crash into the platform at cruising speed.

      The bottom line is you have to know how much energy the particle contains, and also, how much of it would be released in your body. The fact that it's small doesn't indicate anything whatsoever...

      My uninformed guess is that if this thing can cause mini-earthquakes, it could be quite a powerful blast on the body.

  5. Re:Doesn't add up... by Safety+Cap · · Score: 5, Informative
    the shockwave itself, traveling at the speed of sound, took 27 seconds
    Neither P, S, nor Body waves travel at the speed of sound. Their speed depends upon the medium; remember that liquid mediums do not transmit waves as fast as solid ones; liquid mediums also do not transmit shear waves.

    You can compute the speed of compressional waves with the formula V=sqrt((k+.75mu)/rho), where mu is the rigidity and k is the bulk modulus.

    Air is typically 330 m/s at sea level whereas Granite is around 5k-7k m/s.

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  6. Re:Imagine.. by fenix+down · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, it probably wouldn't be that much worse getting one to the head than the rest of your body. I got a nail right into the back of my head once, and it did basically nothing. Admittedly, I was a springy-brained kid at the time, but a needle of a line through most any part of your brain is no real problem to work around.

    Anybody remember that thing a few years ago about how MRI's don't show brain activity until after you do something? That wasn't really saying that your life is random and you're just rationalizing it, it just pointed out that your higher brain really isn't doing that much most of the time. 90% of the time you're coasting on the middle and lower brain. Conversations with coworkers are predictable and formulaic, so your big fancy brain hands it off to your brain stem and saves some glucose in case a puma tries to eat you.

    For this post, the most my higher brain probably put in was the subject. Then some subroutines just stuck together memories and turned them into text. I didn't even have to consider typing it, that got handed off when I first sat down.

    This means a lot for brain damage. Like in Hannibal. If somebody scoops out the right brain-bit, you could actually loose your subroutine for manners. There are actually people who've had strokes and lost certain, highly specific abilities. Like the ability to name fruit, in one textbook case. Just fruit, vegetables are fine, and just names. Show them an apple, they'll know it gets made into pies, they'll know if they like it or not, but the name they'll be clueless about. You could tell them it, and they'll remember as long as it's in their short term memory, but a few seconds later, it'll be gone, because the fruit naming call-up function got crushed by a blood clot.

    From what I understand, that kind of thing will get adapted to in most cases, like your brain will start putting fruit under vegetables, and making a meta-function to deal with that irregularity.

    Not like that stuff happens every time you get knocked in the head, it's just cool. My point is, a cell-sized hole through your head would have to be lined up incredibly well to kill you. You probably wouldn't even notice. And I'm not a neurosurgeon, I just play one on TV.