From: Robert J. Bradbury (bradbury@www.aeiveos.com)
Date: Sun Aug 22 1999 - 23:27:18 MDT
On Sun, 22 Aug 1999, Spike Jones wrote:
> > [hal@finney.org] ...guesses if
> > your lasers were outputting continuous energy then you'd actually create
> > a train of black holes heading outwards, but that is pretty speculative.
>
> Hmmm, I dont think this is right Hal. Im not sure, but I do recall an
> experiment I did years ago in a physics lab. I had two lasers. I
> wondered how the two beams would effect each other. Would they
> interact like two streams from water hoses?
>
I believe the fundamental question revolves around beam (or "energy")
density. If you make the beams energy dense enough (from not say
two continuous beams, but 256 beams with femtosecond pulses on
the same production/collision schedule), then you have a fundamentally
different kind of experiment. Simple beams pass through each
other with little or no effect. The question is, when does the
energy density become high enough to effect that the "fabric"
of space/time/energy/mass enough to effect the progagation?
I believe some of the messages have addressed some of the limits,
but I don't believe we have closure yet.
Robert
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