Can you compress metal and what would be the consequences? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) The network's official Twitter account is up and running again. What content…Removing the metal from a starAcceleration insulation: I can build the Moon cannon, now what?What problems would an semi-immortal alien race run into?Can you forge a sword using just one piece of metal?Can you harness electricity without metal?What would the consequences of this IEG be?What's the heaviest and most resistant metal for an armor?Super metal and the construction of knight weaponsWhat would be an ideal alloying metal for gold coinage?What would the short term consequences of the sun disappearing?
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Can you compress metal and what would be the consequences?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
The network's official Twitter account is up and running again. What content…Removing the metal from a starAcceleration insulation: I can build the Moon cannon, now what?What problems would an semi-immortal alien race run into?Can you forge a sword using just one piece of metal?Can you harness electricity without metal?What would the consequences of this IEG be?What's the heaviest and most resistant metal for an armor?Super metal and the construction of knight weaponsWhat would be an ideal alloying metal for gold coinage?What would the short term consequences of the sun disappearing?
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Following my mutant thread, I'd like some insight on one of them.
I wrote this first generation highly powerful mutant whose ability revolves around metal.
(Context, skippable if you're only here for the scientific part)
For the context, a group of first-gen mutants got together, and seeing their power could loosely represent the greek pantheon, they decided to spin their super-identity around the concept. The metal bender is Hephaïstos.
The mutant in question, on top of being extremely strong, can "shrink" (and un-shrink) metal, while making it retains its mass. He creates several tons oversized weapons, then shrink them and use them in combat.
(Some more skippable context)
To be precise, he shrinks them until they're bauble-sized, wears (litteral) tons of them, and un-shrink them/seize them appropriately when needed. (Needless to say, Hephaïstos is buffed)
From my basic understanding of physics, you could theoretically accomplish that by forcing atoms to stick closer to each other. The process would increase the density (so mass is conserved) and produce a lower volume - equal weight object.
I'd like to know if it is theoretically plausible and if so, what would be the consequences:
- Would the object keep the same composition? (I.e. Iron keeps being iron, and does not become uranium)
- Would the object retains its weight?
- Would it affect the object durability in any way?
Thanks for pointing out any mistakes in the reasoning or the consequences, and please excuse any misuse of physical terms (I'll be happy to correct if you point it out). The exact process by which atoms are forced to stick closer to each other is the hand-waved part.
reality-check physics metals
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Following my mutant thread, I'd like some insight on one of them.
I wrote this first generation highly powerful mutant whose ability revolves around metal.
(Context, skippable if you're only here for the scientific part)
For the context, a group of first-gen mutants got together, and seeing their power could loosely represent the greek pantheon, they decided to spin their super-identity around the concept. The metal bender is Hephaïstos.
The mutant in question, on top of being extremely strong, can "shrink" (and un-shrink) metal, while making it retains its mass. He creates several tons oversized weapons, then shrink them and use them in combat.
(Some more skippable context)
To be precise, he shrinks them until they're bauble-sized, wears (litteral) tons of them, and un-shrink them/seize them appropriately when needed. (Needless to say, Hephaïstos is buffed)
From my basic understanding of physics, you could theoretically accomplish that by forcing atoms to stick closer to each other. The process would increase the density (so mass is conserved) and produce a lower volume - equal weight object.
I'd like to know if it is theoretically plausible and if so, what would be the consequences:
- Would the object keep the same composition? (I.e. Iron keeps being iron, and does not become uranium)
- Would the object retains its weight?
- Would it affect the object durability in any way?
Thanks for pointing out any mistakes in the reasoning or the consequences, and please excuse any misuse of physical terms (I'll be happy to correct if you point it out). The exact process by which atoms are forced to stick closer to each other is the hand-waved part.
reality-check physics metals
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Why did you use the spoiler formatting?
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– L.Dutch♦
Apr 10 at 13:55
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@L.Dutch Last questions with the story bit got sidetracked with people focusing on the setting rather than the question. I try to keep it not "story-based" and more "general question that can be applied everywhere". (First question I hadn't even put a single bit of context, but people flagged it as "not worldbuilding").
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:59
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Worth noting: metals can compress, just not by much. They resist it with a great deal of force. Also, compressing enriched Uranium a few percent is precisely how nuclear bombs are set off. Food for thought.
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– Cort Ammon
Apr 10 at 15:28
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The amount of heat energy in the material would also be conserved. So when the weapons are shrunk, they would get hot. If he tries to shrink several-ton weapons to hand-size, they might get hot enough to melt or deform. In which case he'd need to do something to cool off the excess heat as he shrinks them.
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– Jared K
Apr 10 at 17:59
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I compress metal all the time, that's what MP3s are for.
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– Theoriok
Apr 11 at 6:53
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Following my mutant thread, I'd like some insight on one of them.
I wrote this first generation highly powerful mutant whose ability revolves around metal.
(Context, skippable if you're only here for the scientific part)
For the context, a group of first-gen mutants got together, and seeing their power could loosely represent the greek pantheon, they decided to spin their super-identity around the concept. The metal bender is Hephaïstos.
The mutant in question, on top of being extremely strong, can "shrink" (and un-shrink) metal, while making it retains its mass. He creates several tons oversized weapons, then shrink them and use them in combat.
(Some more skippable context)
To be precise, he shrinks them until they're bauble-sized, wears (litteral) tons of them, and un-shrink them/seize them appropriately when needed. (Needless to say, Hephaïstos is buffed)
From my basic understanding of physics, you could theoretically accomplish that by forcing atoms to stick closer to each other. The process would increase the density (so mass is conserved) and produce a lower volume - equal weight object.
I'd like to know if it is theoretically plausible and if so, what would be the consequences:
- Would the object keep the same composition? (I.e. Iron keeps being iron, and does not become uranium)
- Would the object retains its weight?
- Would it affect the object durability in any way?
Thanks for pointing out any mistakes in the reasoning or the consequences, and please excuse any misuse of physical terms (I'll be happy to correct if you point it out). The exact process by which atoms are forced to stick closer to each other is the hand-waved part.
reality-check physics metals
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Following my mutant thread, I'd like some insight on one of them.
I wrote this first generation highly powerful mutant whose ability revolves around metal.
(Context, skippable if you're only here for the scientific part)
For the context, a group of first-gen mutants got together, and seeing their power could loosely represent the greek pantheon, they decided to spin their super-identity around the concept. The metal bender is Hephaïstos.
The mutant in question, on top of being extremely strong, can "shrink" (and un-shrink) metal, while making it retains its mass. He creates several tons oversized weapons, then shrink them and use them in combat.
(Some more skippable context)
To be precise, he shrinks them until they're bauble-sized, wears (litteral) tons of them, and un-shrink them/seize them appropriately when needed. (Needless to say, Hephaïstos is buffed)
From my basic understanding of physics, you could theoretically accomplish that by forcing atoms to stick closer to each other. The process would increase the density (so mass is conserved) and produce a lower volume - equal weight object.
I'd like to know if it is theoretically plausible and if so, what would be the consequences:
- Would the object keep the same composition? (I.e. Iron keeps being iron, and does not become uranium)
- Would the object retains its weight?
- Would it affect the object durability in any way?
Thanks for pointing out any mistakes in the reasoning or the consequences, and please excuse any misuse of physical terms (I'll be happy to correct if you point it out). The exact process by which atoms are forced to stick closer to each other is the hand-waved part.
reality-check physics metals
reality-check physics metals
edited Apr 10 at 20:21
Cyn
11.6k12458
11.6k12458
asked Apr 10 at 13:01
NyakouaiNyakouai
1,85811029
1,85811029
3
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Why did you use the spoiler formatting?
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– L.Dutch♦
Apr 10 at 13:55
4
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@L.Dutch Last questions with the story bit got sidetracked with people focusing on the setting rather than the question. I try to keep it not "story-based" and more "general question that can be applied everywhere". (First question I hadn't even put a single bit of context, but people flagged it as "not worldbuilding").
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:59
2
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Worth noting: metals can compress, just not by much. They resist it with a great deal of force. Also, compressing enriched Uranium a few percent is precisely how nuclear bombs are set off. Food for thought.
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– Cort Ammon
Apr 10 at 15:28
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The amount of heat energy in the material would also be conserved. So when the weapons are shrunk, they would get hot. If he tries to shrink several-ton weapons to hand-size, they might get hot enough to melt or deform. In which case he'd need to do something to cool off the excess heat as he shrinks them.
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– Jared K
Apr 10 at 17:59
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I compress metal all the time, that's what MP3s are for.
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– Theoriok
Apr 11 at 6:53
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show 3 more comments
3
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Why did you use the spoiler formatting?
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– L.Dutch♦
Apr 10 at 13:55
4
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@L.Dutch Last questions with the story bit got sidetracked with people focusing on the setting rather than the question. I try to keep it not "story-based" and more "general question that can be applied everywhere". (First question I hadn't even put a single bit of context, but people flagged it as "not worldbuilding").
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:59
2
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Worth noting: metals can compress, just not by much. They resist it with a great deal of force. Also, compressing enriched Uranium a few percent is precisely how nuclear bombs are set off. Food for thought.
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– Cort Ammon
Apr 10 at 15:28
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The amount of heat energy in the material would also be conserved. So when the weapons are shrunk, they would get hot. If he tries to shrink several-ton weapons to hand-size, they might get hot enough to melt or deform. In which case he'd need to do something to cool off the excess heat as he shrinks them.
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– Jared K
Apr 10 at 17:59
8
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I compress metal all the time, that's what MP3s are for.
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– Theoriok
Apr 11 at 6:53
3
3
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Why did you use the spoiler formatting?
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– L.Dutch♦
Apr 10 at 13:55
$begingroup$
Why did you use the spoiler formatting?
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Apr 10 at 13:55
4
4
$begingroup$
@L.Dutch Last questions with the story bit got sidetracked with people focusing on the setting rather than the question. I try to keep it not "story-based" and more "general question that can be applied everywhere". (First question I hadn't even put a single bit of context, but people flagged it as "not worldbuilding").
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:59
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@L.Dutch Last questions with the story bit got sidetracked with people focusing on the setting rather than the question. I try to keep it not "story-based" and more "general question that can be applied everywhere". (First question I hadn't even put a single bit of context, but people flagged it as "not worldbuilding").
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:59
2
2
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Worth noting: metals can compress, just not by much. They resist it with a great deal of force. Also, compressing enriched Uranium a few percent is precisely how nuclear bombs are set off. Food for thought.
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– Cort Ammon
Apr 10 at 15:28
$begingroup$
Worth noting: metals can compress, just not by much. They resist it with a great deal of force. Also, compressing enriched Uranium a few percent is precisely how nuclear bombs are set off. Food for thought.
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– Cort Ammon
Apr 10 at 15:28
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The amount of heat energy in the material would also be conserved. So when the weapons are shrunk, they would get hot. If he tries to shrink several-ton weapons to hand-size, they might get hot enough to melt or deform. In which case he'd need to do something to cool off the excess heat as he shrinks them.
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– Jared K
Apr 10 at 17:59
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The amount of heat energy in the material would also be conserved. So when the weapons are shrunk, they would get hot. If he tries to shrink several-ton weapons to hand-size, they might get hot enough to melt or deform. In which case he'd need to do something to cool off the excess heat as he shrinks them.
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– Jared K
Apr 10 at 17:59
8
8
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I compress metal all the time, that's what MP3s are for.
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– Theoriok
Apr 11 at 6:53
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I compress metal all the time, that's what MP3s are for.
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– Theoriok
Apr 11 at 6:53
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9 Answers
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Of course it's plausible!
Your world, your rules.
Since you have what is basically a human doing the shrinking & expanding of the metal, the obvious means is a kind of magic. As you already said: the mutant squeezes the metal so that the atoms press closer together, then reexpands the metal to its normal dimensions.
Consequences:
- eventually, if he squeezes the metal enough, he might end up with a neutronium bauble.
- if the number of atomic particles remains constant, then the weight will remain the same; it'll just be in a smaller space.
- durability should remain the same as well. Magic after all!
- the only open question is how Hephaistos keeps the metal squozen down into bauble form: we would need incredible pressure generating machines & technology to accomplish this feat, and would need to keep applying those forces in order to keep the metal compressed. He must also be making use of some kind of force field that maintains the bauble's diminutive size. Presumably, if he falls unconscious or is killed, his weapons will lose their magical integrity and will explosively expand back to their original volume.
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Cool bit with the weapons regaining their size if he falls unconscious or is killed. The rest being the "power of handwavium", I'm not too worried. Thanks for the check!
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:36
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Presumably the force that holds the weapon shrunk is the same one as Ant-Man uses, minus the weight reduction bit
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– John Dvorak
Apr 10 at 14:26
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To sprinkle in some physics: There is acutally ton of space between nuclei even in "densely packed" materials. It's the electrons that fills up the space, and handwaving them staying a tad closer to the core could make for a cool sciency scene. (also that would make the material appear far cooler
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– Hobbamok
Apr 10 at 14:39
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Extra bit of info - restoration of weapons to original condition would require some handwavium. "Explosive decompression" would result in cracked and misshapen objects.
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– Alexander
Apr 10 at 16:13
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Upvoted for "squozen" :-)
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– Moshe Katz
Apr 10 at 21:54
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Nice idea, but unfortunately not very realistic
Here's why:
- First off: Of course the atoms would be closer together but they would also repel each other. Which means as soon as you release the pressure, the atoms would push each other away and the weapon becomes bigger again, maybe not as big as originally but definitely quite close to that
- Heat is an important factor. If you pump your tire with a hand pump and you touch the shaft of the pump afterwards you will notice that it will be quite hot. If you compress a weapon like you described there will be a lot of heat that has to be transported away. Else your weapon would either melt or lose its properties (see below)
- Even if two pieces of metal or composed of the same element they can be different in the shape of the metal crystals. E.g. If you heat iron in a forge and cool it down slowly it will be softer and more flexible. If you cool it rapidly it will be very hard but break more easily. So the components in your weapon would probably loose their properties if you compress them.
- Let's say you could compress them regardless of the facts above: How would you do it? If you apply pressure in one direction the weapon will squeeze towards the other direction. So you'd need to apply the pressure from all direction and it has to be exactly the same amount of pressure. Else your weapon will deform and will be useless after inflation.
- And last but not least: How would you inflate it again without deformation? You'd need to reverse the process described above with perfect precision
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Point 1: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point three: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point four: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Five is the same. But three is a really cool bit to go with the Hephaïstos theme, thanks for the information.
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:38
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While not realistic per se, as pointed out by the answer of CKA, it can work as an "arbitrary" superpower, as long as it is consistent. So, what would happen if this Hephaïstos actually had the power of squeezing metal atoms together by thousandfolds if not millionfolds? He would create degenerate matter, the stuff white dwarf stars are made of.
The compression would heat the metal to immense temperatures, so I will assume that the extra heat is temporarily stored by the power itself, and put back when it stops acting. Heat transfer depending on surface, it may have an immense heat capacity for its size, assuming the stable degenerate matter somehow keeps working like a metal in that regard.
If the power stops instantly, then those baubles are bombs, possibly equivalent to nuclear weapons.
If his power has an "inertia", and the bauble only slowly expands back to its original size once the effect stops, he can still use the expansion to break pretty much anything, but in the way of a hydraulic piston instead of a bomb. Inversely, the compression itself may be used to crush things with irresistible force, possibly up to nuclear fusion level. If you want to avoid this, the compression or expansion effect may be resisted externally due to how the power itself works - if expansion is limited, an object could be kept indefinitely in its compressed state if, for example, encased in something hard.
Baubles massing several tons are extraordinarily scary things. They will fall through the ground if you leave them there. So as Hephaïstos is strong enough to wear it, he is also strong enough to throw them, and there is nothing (barring other superpowers) that can survive that level of armour-piercing. If he needs less armour-piercing and more impact damage, simply compress it less, to have more contact surface for the same projectile mass and speed. If he can compress and throw shrapnel, armor-piercing dust would also be a terrifying weapon. And of course, a bauble knife or cutting wire will cut through anything. Conversely, compressed armor will stop any non-superpowered attack with sheer mass and density.
Also note that Hephaïstos is not only immensely strong, to be able to carry those, he also has an incredibly resistant skin (and clothes), or some sort of telekinetic powers. Otherwise, the baubles will go through him as easily as through any ordinary matter. (This type of required secondary superpower is similar to how Superman can grab a car by its bumper without ripping said bumper apart.)
And of course, let's not forget that he is wearing literally tons of equipment, so a car hitting him will stop the car, not send him flying.
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Thanks for the highlights, precisely the kind of extra details I need to make this coherent (after the not scientifical superpower). I lack the knowledge to understand why compression exhausts heat. Would it be possible to dissipate this heat by "quenching" the metal? (And thus, he would be able to create new objects effectively only in precises conditions). Also, as you noted, he is vastly over-powered, but this is kind of the point of a god themed mutant, so I'm fine with that :)
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:15
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Also, I'm curious regarding the inertia of a grain of dust (and further in the reasonning, a handful) weighting several tons. Hard time wrapping my head around the idea.
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:24
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@Nyakouai Matter is heating up when compressed, this is how freezers work - as to why, well, I'll let better qualified people answer that one :) As for dust grains massing tons, this would need a compression factor of at least 100 000 in each dimension (so its density would be a trillion times more). But even without going that far, a 10g, 0.01mm dust grain would exert a pressure of 10ton/cm² maybe not enough to go through the ground, but if thrown hard enough...
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– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:39
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@Nyakouai As for quenching, 1m³ cube compressed to 1cm³ would have the same mass, but with 1/10000 of the surface. Heat transfer happening on surface (assuming the compressed metal has the same thermal properties otherwise), then it would heat up or cool down 10000 times more slowly. This could potentially be useful...
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– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:45
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@Nyakouai Yes, a 100 linear factor (affecting size) is also a 1M volumetric factor (affecting density), and a 10K surface factor (affecting surface area) as per the square-cube law This is why the anchor is 100 times smaller, but 1M times denser. Also I forgot, but he may need another secondary superpower: not being weighted down by what he carries. Otherwise, each of his footsteps will crack the pavement with the weight of many tons of equipment!
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– Eth
Apr 10 at 17:35
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Metals are to some degree compressible, and they may be compressed even further undergoing some phase transitions to denser modifications. Plutonium is a metal famous for having many modifications and a more dense modification created under high pressure is one ingredient of a nuclear bomb.
However, under given conditions (pressure and temperature) only one modification is stable and the other modifications are usually unstable or in rare cases meta-stable (like diamond, a meta-stable modification of carbon/graphite under normal conditions). A phase transition is always mass preserving and the chemical identity of the material is unchanged, but the stability of an object is usually not guaranteed and sharpness of weapons is surely not preserved.
The best your mutants can have are weapons made of very dense meta-stable metal causing heavy violence to the victims and breaking weapons made of low density metals. Live transformations from small to big or vice versa won't work. Depending on the tech level, those very heavy weapons are probably copy-protected (but still can be conquered or stolen by non-mutants).
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I'll be looking at the energy side of this with my admittedly very cursory understanding of degenerate matter, because it's pretty interesting. If you want to compress metal down to small, but still macroscopic sizes it's probably alright to disregard anything to do with the nucleus and just look at the Fermi energy of the electron gas within the metal. The energy per electron is $E = hbar^2 (3pi^2*Electron Density)^2/3/2me $ in a Fermi gas. According to this table http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Tables/fermi.html the value for iron would be $17*10^28$ free electrons per cubic meter. Which gives us about $11 eV$ of energy per free electron. If you want to cut the iron's density by a factor of say, ten, we have ten times higher electron density and an increase in energy of $10^2/3$, ca. $4.64$. So each free electron has an energy of about $51eV$ now. As said before, there's $17*10^28$ free electrons in a cubic meter of iron. Each of those has 40 additional electronvolts of energy now, which comes up to a total of $1.09 * 10^12 J$ of energy, or $260 t$ of TNT equivalent. Yep, a block of metal is practically a small nuke. Formidable indeed if your mutant can also spontaneously decompress metal.
To answer 1): The density in a White Dwarf is a hundred thousand times larger than iron, but the nuclei still stay intact in the degenerate electron gas. Iron will stay iron even for a very high compression.
2): Yes, I see nothing that would indicate otherwise. It's just very dense.
3): Realistically it'd be a white hot nugget of extremely high temperature, see math above. Having it be stable requires handwaving. It makes intuitive sense that extreme density would also result in an increase in durability though, there's simply more mass to move out of the way if someone wants to punch a hole into it. Another cool property you could give these metals is superconductivity. Highly compressed hydrogen is theorized to turn into a superconducting metal for example, so it's not a farfetched idea to apply that here too. There's all kinds of cool stuff coming with that, like levitating in magnetic fields.
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Don't forget about inertia. You must push as hard to move a bauble as if it were its normal size & every movement continues in its direction & rotation until you put in the same energy as you did to get it started. (Consider handling a piano via an attached bracelet charm.) This also means that the force & pressure to push it and get the friction to twist it is increased.
On the other hand, you really don't need weapons or metals, you can just compress rocks or for that matter marshmallows, because when you throw them the target is going to have to donate the same amount of energy at the same pressures as you.
PS Asimov addressed some of these issues in the introduction of, text of, and essays about his novelization of the movie Fantastic Voyage, wherein humans & their submarine are shrunk to do surgery.
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These are just my musings, I might be wrong in some things because i'm not a scientist, but these are items I would incorporate/account for.
If your weapons are made of a pure metal there shouldn't be much issue I would suspect, but if you have some form of contaminant I would imagine it would work like squeezing water of out of a sponge, the carbon for example leaking out of the metal because it needs to make room for the lattice of the metal atoms that are squeezed together by the power. Or you follow the astronomers interpretation of metal and that's basically everything is a metal that's not hydrogen and helium. But even then the mixing of materials could pose problems due to different atomic sizes when compressed that hard to reduce size.
Assuming the magic applies uniform pressure causing the metals to shrink the metals could "bounce" out like a spring when it's uncompressed too fast. Your mutant will need patience in order to prevent growing damage when expanding.
https://accendoreliability.com/stress-metals/ explains it pretty well.
Also from the same site:
With most modern metals yielding usually occurs at about 1% of the theoretic strength of the atomic bonds. Many materials yield at about 0.1% of the theoretic strength.
The reason metals have such low strengths is because of imperfect atomic structures in the crystal lattices which make them up. Often a row of atoms will stop mid crystal and a gap is created in the atomic structure. These gaps act as huge stress raising points known as dislocations.
So basically his weapons need to be metal perfect, without any imperfections. That would make his materials of course extremely valuable for the scientific community and could be a nice source of income.
His swords or metals could make for a nice bomb. Imagine a metal slab the size of a pellet, but actually is the size of a brick. He throws it at the enemy and as it lands there he releases his magic.
The spring effect from the sudden pressure release will probably tear the metal apart sending shrapnel flying everywhere, and depending on the rate of expansion send a shock wave through the air that will rupture internal organs.
It's a very dangerous power he has.
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*Your World, Your Rules*
Having a basic understanding of the physics in our world can help you formulate a reasonable alternative for your world.
Here are a couple of articles that explain atoms and nuclei,
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_nucleus
- http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/physics/sobel/Nucphys/atomprop.html
Roughly paraphrasing the CUNY article,
An atom is about 10e-10 meters in size. Although atoms of different
elements vary in sizes, use a rough estimate of 10e-10 as the size of
any atom.
An atom is composed of a nucleus surrounded by an electron cloud. The
nucleus is about 10e-15 m in size (about 10e-5 or 1/100,000 of the
atom). A good comparison of the nucleus to the atom is a pea in the
middle of a racetrack.
The nucleus is composed of protons (positive) and neutrons (zero).
There is a nuclear force which is (mostly) attractive and acts between
protons and neutrons, and is stronger than the repulsive electric
force.
Your blacksmith could generate some 'field' or alter metals to,
- manipulate (amplify) the nuclear force of metals
- moderate (reduce or weaken) repulsive force between nuclei of metals
- add another particle to the nuclei of metals (to do the above)
Option 3 makes the most sense to me, depends upon how your desired storytelling
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$begingroup$
The size of atoms, the size of molecules, and the distance of metal atoms in the crystal grid are determined by the size of the electron hull, which in turn depends on the interaction of the electrons with each other and with the nucleus.
Electrons around nuclei behave a bit like three-dimensional standing waves, comparable to a resonating surface, but in space. The wave's shape is determined by the electric charge of the electron and proton, the mass of the electron, its energy and the vacuum permittivity.
The latter in turn is connected to the light speed; higher speed of light would decrease the permittivity which in turn would increase forces between charges, if I understand correctly. Let's assume that higher forces would result in smaller atoms and denser crystal grids. All your hero needs to do is to locally increase the speed of light. I would think that that is equivalent to locally speeding up time. Easy ;-).
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9 Answers
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$begingroup$
Of course it's plausible!
Your world, your rules.
Since you have what is basically a human doing the shrinking & expanding of the metal, the obvious means is a kind of magic. As you already said: the mutant squeezes the metal so that the atoms press closer together, then reexpands the metal to its normal dimensions.
Consequences:
- eventually, if he squeezes the metal enough, he might end up with a neutronium bauble.
- if the number of atomic particles remains constant, then the weight will remain the same; it'll just be in a smaller space.
- durability should remain the same as well. Magic after all!
- the only open question is how Hephaistos keeps the metal squozen down into bauble form: we would need incredible pressure generating machines & technology to accomplish this feat, and would need to keep applying those forces in order to keep the metal compressed. He must also be making use of some kind of force field that maintains the bauble's diminutive size. Presumably, if he falls unconscious or is killed, his weapons will lose their magical integrity and will explosively expand back to their original volume.
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3
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Cool bit with the weapons regaining their size if he falls unconscious or is killed. The rest being the "power of handwavium", I'm not too worried. Thanks for the check!
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– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:36
1
$begingroup$
Presumably the force that holds the weapon shrunk is the same one as Ant-Man uses, minus the weight reduction bit
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– John Dvorak
Apr 10 at 14:26
1
$begingroup$
To sprinkle in some physics: There is acutally ton of space between nuclei even in "densely packed" materials. It's the electrons that fills up the space, and handwaving them staying a tad closer to the core could make for a cool sciency scene. (also that would make the material appear far cooler
$endgroup$
– Hobbamok
Apr 10 at 14:39
1
$begingroup$
Extra bit of info - restoration of weapons to original condition would require some handwavium. "Explosive decompression" would result in cracked and misshapen objects.
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Apr 10 at 16:13
6
$begingroup$
Upvoted for "squozen" :-)
$endgroup$
– Moshe Katz
Apr 10 at 21:54
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Of course it's plausible!
Your world, your rules.
Since you have what is basically a human doing the shrinking & expanding of the metal, the obvious means is a kind of magic. As you already said: the mutant squeezes the metal so that the atoms press closer together, then reexpands the metal to its normal dimensions.
Consequences:
- eventually, if he squeezes the metal enough, he might end up with a neutronium bauble.
- if the number of atomic particles remains constant, then the weight will remain the same; it'll just be in a smaller space.
- durability should remain the same as well. Magic after all!
- the only open question is how Hephaistos keeps the metal squozen down into bauble form: we would need incredible pressure generating machines & technology to accomplish this feat, and would need to keep applying those forces in order to keep the metal compressed. He must also be making use of some kind of force field that maintains the bauble's diminutive size. Presumably, if he falls unconscious or is killed, his weapons will lose their magical integrity and will explosively expand back to their original volume.
$endgroup$
3
$begingroup$
Cool bit with the weapons regaining their size if he falls unconscious or is killed. The rest being the "power of handwavium", I'm not too worried. Thanks for the check!
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:36
1
$begingroup$
Presumably the force that holds the weapon shrunk is the same one as Ant-Man uses, minus the weight reduction bit
$endgroup$
– John Dvorak
Apr 10 at 14:26
1
$begingroup$
To sprinkle in some physics: There is acutally ton of space between nuclei even in "densely packed" materials. It's the electrons that fills up the space, and handwaving them staying a tad closer to the core could make for a cool sciency scene. (also that would make the material appear far cooler
$endgroup$
– Hobbamok
Apr 10 at 14:39
1
$begingroup$
Extra bit of info - restoration of weapons to original condition would require some handwavium. "Explosive decompression" would result in cracked and misshapen objects.
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Apr 10 at 16:13
6
$begingroup$
Upvoted for "squozen" :-)
$endgroup$
– Moshe Katz
Apr 10 at 21:54
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Of course it's plausible!
Your world, your rules.
Since you have what is basically a human doing the shrinking & expanding of the metal, the obvious means is a kind of magic. As you already said: the mutant squeezes the metal so that the atoms press closer together, then reexpands the metal to its normal dimensions.
Consequences:
- eventually, if he squeezes the metal enough, he might end up with a neutronium bauble.
- if the number of atomic particles remains constant, then the weight will remain the same; it'll just be in a smaller space.
- durability should remain the same as well. Magic after all!
- the only open question is how Hephaistos keeps the metal squozen down into bauble form: we would need incredible pressure generating machines & technology to accomplish this feat, and would need to keep applying those forces in order to keep the metal compressed. He must also be making use of some kind of force field that maintains the bauble's diminutive size. Presumably, if he falls unconscious or is killed, his weapons will lose their magical integrity and will explosively expand back to their original volume.
$endgroup$
Of course it's plausible!
Your world, your rules.
Since you have what is basically a human doing the shrinking & expanding of the metal, the obvious means is a kind of magic. As you already said: the mutant squeezes the metal so that the atoms press closer together, then reexpands the metal to its normal dimensions.
Consequences:
- eventually, if he squeezes the metal enough, he might end up with a neutronium bauble.
- if the number of atomic particles remains constant, then the weight will remain the same; it'll just be in a smaller space.
- durability should remain the same as well. Magic after all!
- the only open question is how Hephaistos keeps the metal squozen down into bauble form: we would need incredible pressure generating machines & technology to accomplish this feat, and would need to keep applying those forces in order to keep the metal compressed. He must also be making use of some kind of force field that maintains the bauble's diminutive size. Presumably, if he falls unconscious or is killed, his weapons will lose their magical integrity and will explosively expand back to their original volume.
answered Apr 10 at 13:24
elemtilaselemtilas
15.1k23364
15.1k23364
3
$begingroup$
Cool bit with the weapons regaining their size if he falls unconscious or is killed. The rest being the "power of handwavium", I'm not too worried. Thanks for the check!
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:36
1
$begingroup$
Presumably the force that holds the weapon shrunk is the same one as Ant-Man uses, minus the weight reduction bit
$endgroup$
– John Dvorak
Apr 10 at 14:26
1
$begingroup$
To sprinkle in some physics: There is acutally ton of space between nuclei even in "densely packed" materials. It's the electrons that fills up the space, and handwaving them staying a tad closer to the core could make for a cool sciency scene. (also that would make the material appear far cooler
$endgroup$
– Hobbamok
Apr 10 at 14:39
1
$begingroup$
Extra bit of info - restoration of weapons to original condition would require some handwavium. "Explosive decompression" would result in cracked and misshapen objects.
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Apr 10 at 16:13
6
$begingroup$
Upvoted for "squozen" :-)
$endgroup$
– Moshe Katz
Apr 10 at 21:54
add a comment |
3
$begingroup$
Cool bit with the weapons regaining their size if he falls unconscious or is killed. The rest being the "power of handwavium", I'm not too worried. Thanks for the check!
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:36
1
$begingroup$
Presumably the force that holds the weapon shrunk is the same one as Ant-Man uses, minus the weight reduction bit
$endgroup$
– John Dvorak
Apr 10 at 14:26
1
$begingroup$
To sprinkle in some physics: There is acutally ton of space between nuclei even in "densely packed" materials. It's the electrons that fills up the space, and handwaving them staying a tad closer to the core could make for a cool sciency scene. (also that would make the material appear far cooler
$endgroup$
– Hobbamok
Apr 10 at 14:39
1
$begingroup$
Extra bit of info - restoration of weapons to original condition would require some handwavium. "Explosive decompression" would result in cracked and misshapen objects.
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Apr 10 at 16:13
6
$begingroup$
Upvoted for "squozen" :-)
$endgroup$
– Moshe Katz
Apr 10 at 21:54
3
3
$begingroup$
Cool bit with the weapons regaining their size if he falls unconscious or is killed. The rest being the "power of handwavium", I'm not too worried. Thanks for the check!
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:36
$begingroup$
Cool bit with the weapons regaining their size if he falls unconscious or is killed. The rest being the "power of handwavium", I'm not too worried. Thanks for the check!
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:36
1
1
$begingroup$
Presumably the force that holds the weapon shrunk is the same one as Ant-Man uses, minus the weight reduction bit
$endgroup$
– John Dvorak
Apr 10 at 14:26
$begingroup$
Presumably the force that holds the weapon shrunk is the same one as Ant-Man uses, minus the weight reduction bit
$endgroup$
– John Dvorak
Apr 10 at 14:26
1
1
$begingroup$
To sprinkle in some physics: There is acutally ton of space between nuclei even in "densely packed" materials. It's the electrons that fills up the space, and handwaving them staying a tad closer to the core could make for a cool sciency scene. (also that would make the material appear far cooler
$endgroup$
– Hobbamok
Apr 10 at 14:39
$begingroup$
To sprinkle in some physics: There is acutally ton of space between nuclei even in "densely packed" materials. It's the electrons that fills up the space, and handwaving them staying a tad closer to the core could make for a cool sciency scene. (also that would make the material appear far cooler
$endgroup$
– Hobbamok
Apr 10 at 14:39
1
1
$begingroup$
Extra bit of info - restoration of weapons to original condition would require some handwavium. "Explosive decompression" would result in cracked and misshapen objects.
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Apr 10 at 16:13
$begingroup$
Extra bit of info - restoration of weapons to original condition would require some handwavium. "Explosive decompression" would result in cracked and misshapen objects.
$endgroup$
– Alexander
Apr 10 at 16:13
6
6
$begingroup$
Upvoted for "squozen" :-)
$endgroup$
– Moshe Katz
Apr 10 at 21:54
$begingroup$
Upvoted for "squozen" :-)
$endgroup$
– Moshe Katz
Apr 10 at 21:54
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Nice idea, but unfortunately not very realistic
Here's why:
- First off: Of course the atoms would be closer together but they would also repel each other. Which means as soon as you release the pressure, the atoms would push each other away and the weapon becomes bigger again, maybe not as big as originally but definitely quite close to that
- Heat is an important factor. If you pump your tire with a hand pump and you touch the shaft of the pump afterwards you will notice that it will be quite hot. If you compress a weapon like you described there will be a lot of heat that has to be transported away. Else your weapon would either melt or lose its properties (see below)
- Even if two pieces of metal or composed of the same element they can be different in the shape of the metal crystals. E.g. If you heat iron in a forge and cool it down slowly it will be softer and more flexible. If you cool it rapidly it will be very hard but break more easily. So the components in your weapon would probably loose their properties if you compress them.
- Let's say you could compress them regardless of the facts above: How would you do it? If you apply pressure in one direction the weapon will squeeze towards the other direction. So you'd need to apply the pressure from all direction and it has to be exactly the same amount of pressure. Else your weapon will deform and will be useless after inflation.
- And last but not least: How would you inflate it again without deformation? You'd need to reverse the process described above with perfect precision
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2
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Point 1: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point three: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point four: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Five is the same. But three is a really cool bit to go with the Hephaïstos theme, thanks for the information.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:38
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Nice idea, but unfortunately not very realistic
Here's why:
- First off: Of course the atoms would be closer together but they would also repel each other. Which means as soon as you release the pressure, the atoms would push each other away and the weapon becomes bigger again, maybe not as big as originally but definitely quite close to that
- Heat is an important factor. If you pump your tire with a hand pump and you touch the shaft of the pump afterwards you will notice that it will be quite hot. If you compress a weapon like you described there will be a lot of heat that has to be transported away. Else your weapon would either melt or lose its properties (see below)
- Even if two pieces of metal or composed of the same element they can be different in the shape of the metal crystals. E.g. If you heat iron in a forge and cool it down slowly it will be softer and more flexible. If you cool it rapidly it will be very hard but break more easily. So the components in your weapon would probably loose their properties if you compress them.
- Let's say you could compress them regardless of the facts above: How would you do it? If you apply pressure in one direction the weapon will squeeze towards the other direction. So you'd need to apply the pressure from all direction and it has to be exactly the same amount of pressure. Else your weapon will deform and will be useless after inflation.
- And last but not least: How would you inflate it again without deformation? You'd need to reverse the process described above with perfect precision
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
Point 1: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point three: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point four: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Five is the same. But three is a really cool bit to go with the Hephaïstos theme, thanks for the information.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:38
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Nice idea, but unfortunately not very realistic
Here's why:
- First off: Of course the atoms would be closer together but they would also repel each other. Which means as soon as you release the pressure, the atoms would push each other away and the weapon becomes bigger again, maybe not as big as originally but definitely quite close to that
- Heat is an important factor. If you pump your tire with a hand pump and you touch the shaft of the pump afterwards you will notice that it will be quite hot. If you compress a weapon like you described there will be a lot of heat that has to be transported away. Else your weapon would either melt or lose its properties (see below)
- Even if two pieces of metal or composed of the same element they can be different in the shape of the metal crystals. E.g. If you heat iron in a forge and cool it down slowly it will be softer and more flexible. If you cool it rapidly it will be very hard but break more easily. So the components in your weapon would probably loose their properties if you compress them.
- Let's say you could compress them regardless of the facts above: How would you do it? If you apply pressure in one direction the weapon will squeeze towards the other direction. So you'd need to apply the pressure from all direction and it has to be exactly the same amount of pressure. Else your weapon will deform and will be useless after inflation.
- And last but not least: How would you inflate it again without deformation? You'd need to reverse the process described above with perfect precision
$endgroup$
Nice idea, but unfortunately not very realistic
Here's why:
- First off: Of course the atoms would be closer together but they would also repel each other. Which means as soon as you release the pressure, the atoms would push each other away and the weapon becomes bigger again, maybe not as big as originally but definitely quite close to that
- Heat is an important factor. If you pump your tire with a hand pump and you touch the shaft of the pump afterwards you will notice that it will be quite hot. If you compress a weapon like you described there will be a lot of heat that has to be transported away. Else your weapon would either melt or lose its properties (see below)
- Even if two pieces of metal or composed of the same element they can be different in the shape of the metal crystals. E.g. If you heat iron in a forge and cool it down slowly it will be softer and more flexible. If you cool it rapidly it will be very hard but break more easily. So the components in your weapon would probably loose their properties if you compress them.
- Let's say you could compress them regardless of the facts above: How would you do it? If you apply pressure in one direction the weapon will squeeze towards the other direction. So you'd need to apply the pressure from all direction and it has to be exactly the same amount of pressure. Else your weapon will deform and will be useless after inflation.
- And last but not least: How would you inflate it again without deformation? You'd need to reverse the process described above with perfect precision
edited Apr 11 at 0:03
Brythan
20.9k74286
20.9k74286
answered Apr 10 at 13:17
CKACKA
1,05618
1,05618
2
$begingroup$
Point 1: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point three: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point four: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Five is the same. But three is a really cool bit to go with the Hephaïstos theme, thanks for the information.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:38
add a comment |
2
$begingroup$
Point 1: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point three: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point four: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Five is the same. But three is a really cool bit to go with the Hephaïstos theme, thanks for the information.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:38
2
2
$begingroup$
Point 1: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point three: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point four: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Five is the same. But three is a really cool bit to go with the Hephaïstos theme, thanks for the information.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:38
$begingroup$
Point 1: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point three: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Point four: part of the hand-wave, I'm ok with that. Five is the same. But three is a really cool bit to go with the Hephaïstos theme, thanks for the information.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:38
add a comment |
$begingroup$
While not realistic per se, as pointed out by the answer of CKA, it can work as an "arbitrary" superpower, as long as it is consistent. So, what would happen if this Hephaïstos actually had the power of squeezing metal atoms together by thousandfolds if not millionfolds? He would create degenerate matter, the stuff white dwarf stars are made of.
The compression would heat the metal to immense temperatures, so I will assume that the extra heat is temporarily stored by the power itself, and put back when it stops acting. Heat transfer depending on surface, it may have an immense heat capacity for its size, assuming the stable degenerate matter somehow keeps working like a metal in that regard.
If the power stops instantly, then those baubles are bombs, possibly equivalent to nuclear weapons.
If his power has an "inertia", and the bauble only slowly expands back to its original size once the effect stops, he can still use the expansion to break pretty much anything, but in the way of a hydraulic piston instead of a bomb. Inversely, the compression itself may be used to crush things with irresistible force, possibly up to nuclear fusion level. If you want to avoid this, the compression or expansion effect may be resisted externally due to how the power itself works - if expansion is limited, an object could be kept indefinitely in its compressed state if, for example, encased in something hard.
Baubles massing several tons are extraordinarily scary things. They will fall through the ground if you leave them there. So as Hephaïstos is strong enough to wear it, he is also strong enough to throw them, and there is nothing (barring other superpowers) that can survive that level of armour-piercing. If he needs less armour-piercing and more impact damage, simply compress it less, to have more contact surface for the same projectile mass and speed. If he can compress and throw shrapnel, armor-piercing dust would also be a terrifying weapon. And of course, a bauble knife or cutting wire will cut through anything. Conversely, compressed armor will stop any non-superpowered attack with sheer mass and density.
Also note that Hephaïstos is not only immensely strong, to be able to carry those, he also has an incredibly resistant skin (and clothes), or some sort of telekinetic powers. Otherwise, the baubles will go through him as easily as through any ordinary matter. (This type of required secondary superpower is similar to how Superman can grab a car by its bumper without ripping said bumper apart.)
And of course, let's not forget that he is wearing literally tons of equipment, so a car hitting him will stop the car, not send him flying.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Thanks for the highlights, precisely the kind of extra details I need to make this coherent (after the not scientifical superpower). I lack the knowledge to understand why compression exhausts heat. Would it be possible to dissipate this heat by "quenching" the metal? (And thus, he would be able to create new objects effectively only in precises conditions). Also, as you noted, he is vastly over-powered, but this is kind of the point of a god themed mutant, so I'm fine with that :)
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:15
$begingroup$
Also, I'm curious regarding the inertia of a grain of dust (and further in the reasonning, a handful) weighting several tons. Hard time wrapping my head around the idea.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:24
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Matter is heating up when compressed, this is how freezers work - as to why, well, I'll let better qualified people answer that one :) As for dust grains massing tons, this would need a compression factor of at least 100 000 in each dimension (so its density would be a trillion times more). But even without going that far, a 10g, 0.01mm dust grain would exert a pressure of 10ton/cm² maybe not enough to go through the ground, but if thrown hard enough...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:39
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai As for quenching, 1m³ cube compressed to 1cm³ would have the same mass, but with 1/10000 of the surface. Heat transfer happening on surface (assuming the compressed metal has the same thermal properties otherwise), then it would heat up or cool down 10000 times more slowly. This could potentially be useful...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:45
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Yes, a 100 linear factor (affecting size) is also a 1M volumetric factor (affecting density), and a 10K surface factor (affecting surface area) as per the square-cube law This is why the anchor is 100 times smaller, but 1M times denser. Also I forgot, but he may need another secondary superpower: not being weighted down by what he carries. Otherwise, each of his footsteps will crack the pavement with the weight of many tons of equipment!
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 17:35
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
While not realistic per se, as pointed out by the answer of CKA, it can work as an "arbitrary" superpower, as long as it is consistent. So, what would happen if this Hephaïstos actually had the power of squeezing metal atoms together by thousandfolds if not millionfolds? He would create degenerate matter, the stuff white dwarf stars are made of.
The compression would heat the metal to immense temperatures, so I will assume that the extra heat is temporarily stored by the power itself, and put back when it stops acting. Heat transfer depending on surface, it may have an immense heat capacity for its size, assuming the stable degenerate matter somehow keeps working like a metal in that regard.
If the power stops instantly, then those baubles are bombs, possibly equivalent to nuclear weapons.
If his power has an "inertia", and the bauble only slowly expands back to its original size once the effect stops, he can still use the expansion to break pretty much anything, but in the way of a hydraulic piston instead of a bomb. Inversely, the compression itself may be used to crush things with irresistible force, possibly up to nuclear fusion level. If you want to avoid this, the compression or expansion effect may be resisted externally due to how the power itself works - if expansion is limited, an object could be kept indefinitely in its compressed state if, for example, encased in something hard.
Baubles massing several tons are extraordinarily scary things. They will fall through the ground if you leave them there. So as Hephaïstos is strong enough to wear it, he is also strong enough to throw them, and there is nothing (barring other superpowers) that can survive that level of armour-piercing. If he needs less armour-piercing and more impact damage, simply compress it less, to have more contact surface for the same projectile mass and speed. If he can compress and throw shrapnel, armor-piercing dust would also be a terrifying weapon. And of course, a bauble knife or cutting wire will cut through anything. Conversely, compressed armor will stop any non-superpowered attack with sheer mass and density.
Also note that Hephaïstos is not only immensely strong, to be able to carry those, he also has an incredibly resistant skin (and clothes), or some sort of telekinetic powers. Otherwise, the baubles will go through him as easily as through any ordinary matter. (This type of required secondary superpower is similar to how Superman can grab a car by its bumper without ripping said bumper apart.)
And of course, let's not forget that he is wearing literally tons of equipment, so a car hitting him will stop the car, not send him flying.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Thanks for the highlights, precisely the kind of extra details I need to make this coherent (after the not scientifical superpower). I lack the knowledge to understand why compression exhausts heat. Would it be possible to dissipate this heat by "quenching" the metal? (And thus, he would be able to create new objects effectively only in precises conditions). Also, as you noted, he is vastly over-powered, but this is kind of the point of a god themed mutant, so I'm fine with that :)
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:15
$begingroup$
Also, I'm curious regarding the inertia of a grain of dust (and further in the reasonning, a handful) weighting several tons. Hard time wrapping my head around the idea.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:24
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Matter is heating up when compressed, this is how freezers work - as to why, well, I'll let better qualified people answer that one :) As for dust grains massing tons, this would need a compression factor of at least 100 000 in each dimension (so its density would be a trillion times more). But even without going that far, a 10g, 0.01mm dust grain would exert a pressure of 10ton/cm² maybe not enough to go through the ground, but if thrown hard enough...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:39
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai As for quenching, 1m³ cube compressed to 1cm³ would have the same mass, but with 1/10000 of the surface. Heat transfer happening on surface (assuming the compressed metal has the same thermal properties otherwise), then it would heat up or cool down 10000 times more slowly. This could potentially be useful...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:45
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Yes, a 100 linear factor (affecting size) is also a 1M volumetric factor (affecting density), and a 10K surface factor (affecting surface area) as per the square-cube law This is why the anchor is 100 times smaller, but 1M times denser. Also I forgot, but he may need another secondary superpower: not being weighted down by what he carries. Otherwise, each of his footsteps will crack the pavement with the weight of many tons of equipment!
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 17:35
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
While not realistic per se, as pointed out by the answer of CKA, it can work as an "arbitrary" superpower, as long as it is consistent. So, what would happen if this Hephaïstos actually had the power of squeezing metal atoms together by thousandfolds if not millionfolds? He would create degenerate matter, the stuff white dwarf stars are made of.
The compression would heat the metal to immense temperatures, so I will assume that the extra heat is temporarily stored by the power itself, and put back when it stops acting. Heat transfer depending on surface, it may have an immense heat capacity for its size, assuming the stable degenerate matter somehow keeps working like a metal in that regard.
If the power stops instantly, then those baubles are bombs, possibly equivalent to nuclear weapons.
If his power has an "inertia", and the bauble only slowly expands back to its original size once the effect stops, he can still use the expansion to break pretty much anything, but in the way of a hydraulic piston instead of a bomb. Inversely, the compression itself may be used to crush things with irresistible force, possibly up to nuclear fusion level. If you want to avoid this, the compression or expansion effect may be resisted externally due to how the power itself works - if expansion is limited, an object could be kept indefinitely in its compressed state if, for example, encased in something hard.
Baubles massing several tons are extraordinarily scary things. They will fall through the ground if you leave them there. So as Hephaïstos is strong enough to wear it, he is also strong enough to throw them, and there is nothing (barring other superpowers) that can survive that level of armour-piercing. If he needs less armour-piercing and more impact damage, simply compress it less, to have more contact surface for the same projectile mass and speed. If he can compress and throw shrapnel, armor-piercing dust would also be a terrifying weapon. And of course, a bauble knife or cutting wire will cut through anything. Conversely, compressed armor will stop any non-superpowered attack with sheer mass and density.
Also note that Hephaïstos is not only immensely strong, to be able to carry those, he also has an incredibly resistant skin (and clothes), or some sort of telekinetic powers. Otherwise, the baubles will go through him as easily as through any ordinary matter. (This type of required secondary superpower is similar to how Superman can grab a car by its bumper without ripping said bumper apart.)
And of course, let's not forget that he is wearing literally tons of equipment, so a car hitting him will stop the car, not send him flying.
$endgroup$
While not realistic per se, as pointed out by the answer of CKA, it can work as an "arbitrary" superpower, as long as it is consistent. So, what would happen if this Hephaïstos actually had the power of squeezing metal atoms together by thousandfolds if not millionfolds? He would create degenerate matter, the stuff white dwarf stars are made of.
The compression would heat the metal to immense temperatures, so I will assume that the extra heat is temporarily stored by the power itself, and put back when it stops acting. Heat transfer depending on surface, it may have an immense heat capacity for its size, assuming the stable degenerate matter somehow keeps working like a metal in that regard.
If the power stops instantly, then those baubles are bombs, possibly equivalent to nuclear weapons.
If his power has an "inertia", and the bauble only slowly expands back to its original size once the effect stops, he can still use the expansion to break pretty much anything, but in the way of a hydraulic piston instead of a bomb. Inversely, the compression itself may be used to crush things with irresistible force, possibly up to nuclear fusion level. If you want to avoid this, the compression or expansion effect may be resisted externally due to how the power itself works - if expansion is limited, an object could be kept indefinitely in its compressed state if, for example, encased in something hard.
Baubles massing several tons are extraordinarily scary things. They will fall through the ground if you leave them there. So as Hephaïstos is strong enough to wear it, he is also strong enough to throw them, and there is nothing (barring other superpowers) that can survive that level of armour-piercing. If he needs less armour-piercing and more impact damage, simply compress it less, to have more contact surface for the same projectile mass and speed. If he can compress and throw shrapnel, armor-piercing dust would also be a terrifying weapon. And of course, a bauble knife or cutting wire will cut through anything. Conversely, compressed armor will stop any non-superpowered attack with sheer mass and density.
Also note that Hephaïstos is not only immensely strong, to be able to carry those, he also has an incredibly resistant skin (and clothes), or some sort of telekinetic powers. Otherwise, the baubles will go through him as easily as through any ordinary matter. (This type of required secondary superpower is similar to how Superman can grab a car by its bumper without ripping said bumper apart.)
And of course, let's not forget that he is wearing literally tons of equipment, so a car hitting him will stop the car, not send him flying.
answered Apr 10 at 15:10
EthEth
2,9661822
2,9661822
$begingroup$
Thanks for the highlights, precisely the kind of extra details I need to make this coherent (after the not scientifical superpower). I lack the knowledge to understand why compression exhausts heat. Would it be possible to dissipate this heat by "quenching" the metal? (And thus, he would be able to create new objects effectively only in precises conditions). Also, as you noted, he is vastly over-powered, but this is kind of the point of a god themed mutant, so I'm fine with that :)
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:15
$begingroup$
Also, I'm curious regarding the inertia of a grain of dust (and further in the reasonning, a handful) weighting several tons. Hard time wrapping my head around the idea.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:24
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Matter is heating up when compressed, this is how freezers work - as to why, well, I'll let better qualified people answer that one :) As for dust grains massing tons, this would need a compression factor of at least 100 000 in each dimension (so its density would be a trillion times more). But even without going that far, a 10g, 0.01mm dust grain would exert a pressure of 10ton/cm² maybe not enough to go through the ground, but if thrown hard enough...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:39
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai As for quenching, 1m³ cube compressed to 1cm³ would have the same mass, but with 1/10000 of the surface. Heat transfer happening on surface (assuming the compressed metal has the same thermal properties otherwise), then it would heat up or cool down 10000 times more slowly. This could potentially be useful...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:45
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Yes, a 100 linear factor (affecting size) is also a 1M volumetric factor (affecting density), and a 10K surface factor (affecting surface area) as per the square-cube law This is why the anchor is 100 times smaller, but 1M times denser. Also I forgot, but he may need another secondary superpower: not being weighted down by what he carries. Otherwise, each of his footsteps will crack the pavement with the weight of many tons of equipment!
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 17:35
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
Thanks for the highlights, precisely the kind of extra details I need to make this coherent (after the not scientifical superpower). I lack the knowledge to understand why compression exhausts heat. Would it be possible to dissipate this heat by "quenching" the metal? (And thus, he would be able to create new objects effectively only in precises conditions). Also, as you noted, he is vastly over-powered, but this is kind of the point of a god themed mutant, so I'm fine with that :)
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:15
$begingroup$
Also, I'm curious regarding the inertia of a grain of dust (and further in the reasonning, a handful) weighting several tons. Hard time wrapping my head around the idea.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:24
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Matter is heating up when compressed, this is how freezers work - as to why, well, I'll let better qualified people answer that one :) As for dust grains massing tons, this would need a compression factor of at least 100 000 in each dimension (so its density would be a trillion times more). But even without going that far, a 10g, 0.01mm dust grain would exert a pressure of 10ton/cm² maybe not enough to go through the ground, but if thrown hard enough...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:39
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai As for quenching, 1m³ cube compressed to 1cm³ would have the same mass, but with 1/10000 of the surface. Heat transfer happening on surface (assuming the compressed metal has the same thermal properties otherwise), then it would heat up or cool down 10000 times more slowly. This could potentially be useful...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:45
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Yes, a 100 linear factor (affecting size) is also a 1M volumetric factor (affecting density), and a 10K surface factor (affecting surface area) as per the square-cube law This is why the anchor is 100 times smaller, but 1M times denser. Also I forgot, but he may need another secondary superpower: not being weighted down by what he carries. Otherwise, each of his footsteps will crack the pavement with the weight of many tons of equipment!
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 17:35
$begingroup$
Thanks for the highlights, precisely the kind of extra details I need to make this coherent (after the not scientifical superpower). I lack the knowledge to understand why compression exhausts heat. Would it be possible to dissipate this heat by "quenching" the metal? (And thus, he would be able to create new objects effectively only in precises conditions). Also, as you noted, he is vastly over-powered, but this is kind of the point of a god themed mutant, so I'm fine with that :)
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:15
$begingroup$
Thanks for the highlights, precisely the kind of extra details I need to make this coherent (after the not scientifical superpower). I lack the knowledge to understand why compression exhausts heat. Would it be possible to dissipate this heat by "quenching" the metal? (And thus, he would be able to create new objects effectively only in precises conditions). Also, as you noted, he is vastly over-powered, but this is kind of the point of a god themed mutant, so I'm fine with that :)
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:15
$begingroup$
Also, I'm curious regarding the inertia of a grain of dust (and further in the reasonning, a handful) weighting several tons. Hard time wrapping my head around the idea.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:24
$begingroup$
Also, I'm curious regarding the inertia of a grain of dust (and further in the reasonning, a handful) weighting several tons. Hard time wrapping my head around the idea.
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 15:24
1
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Matter is heating up when compressed, this is how freezers work - as to why, well, I'll let better qualified people answer that one :) As for dust grains massing tons, this would need a compression factor of at least 100 000 in each dimension (so its density would be a trillion times more). But even without going that far, a 10g, 0.01mm dust grain would exert a pressure of 10ton/cm² maybe not enough to go through the ground, but if thrown hard enough...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:39
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Matter is heating up when compressed, this is how freezers work - as to why, well, I'll let better qualified people answer that one :) As for dust grains massing tons, this would need a compression factor of at least 100 000 in each dimension (so its density would be a trillion times more). But even without going that far, a 10g, 0.01mm dust grain would exert a pressure of 10ton/cm² maybe not enough to go through the ground, but if thrown hard enough...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:39
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai As for quenching, 1m³ cube compressed to 1cm³ would have the same mass, but with 1/10000 of the surface. Heat transfer happening on surface (assuming the compressed metal has the same thermal properties otherwise), then it would heat up or cool down 10000 times more slowly. This could potentially be useful...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:45
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai As for quenching, 1m³ cube compressed to 1cm³ would have the same mass, but with 1/10000 of the surface. Heat transfer happening on surface (assuming the compressed metal has the same thermal properties otherwise), then it would heat up or cool down 10000 times more slowly. This could potentially be useful...
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 15:45
1
1
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Yes, a 100 linear factor (affecting size) is also a 1M volumetric factor (affecting density), and a 10K surface factor (affecting surface area) as per the square-cube law This is why the anchor is 100 times smaller, but 1M times denser. Also I forgot, but he may need another secondary superpower: not being weighted down by what he carries. Otherwise, each of his footsteps will crack the pavement with the weight of many tons of equipment!
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 17:35
$begingroup$
@Nyakouai Yes, a 100 linear factor (affecting size) is also a 1M volumetric factor (affecting density), and a 10K surface factor (affecting surface area) as per the square-cube law This is why the anchor is 100 times smaller, but 1M times denser. Also I forgot, but he may need another secondary superpower: not being weighted down by what he carries. Otherwise, each of his footsteps will crack the pavement with the weight of many tons of equipment!
$endgroup$
– Eth
Apr 10 at 17:35
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
Metals are to some degree compressible, and they may be compressed even further undergoing some phase transitions to denser modifications. Plutonium is a metal famous for having many modifications and a more dense modification created under high pressure is one ingredient of a nuclear bomb.
However, under given conditions (pressure and temperature) only one modification is stable and the other modifications are usually unstable or in rare cases meta-stable (like diamond, a meta-stable modification of carbon/graphite under normal conditions). A phase transition is always mass preserving and the chemical identity of the material is unchanged, but the stability of an object is usually not guaranteed and sharpness of weapons is surely not preserved.
The best your mutants can have are weapons made of very dense meta-stable metal causing heavy violence to the victims and breaking weapons made of low density metals. Live transformations from small to big or vice versa won't work. Depending on the tech level, those very heavy weapons are probably copy-protected (but still can be conquered or stolen by non-mutants).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Metals are to some degree compressible, and they may be compressed even further undergoing some phase transitions to denser modifications. Plutonium is a metal famous for having many modifications and a more dense modification created under high pressure is one ingredient of a nuclear bomb.
However, under given conditions (pressure and temperature) only one modification is stable and the other modifications are usually unstable or in rare cases meta-stable (like diamond, a meta-stable modification of carbon/graphite under normal conditions). A phase transition is always mass preserving and the chemical identity of the material is unchanged, but the stability of an object is usually not guaranteed and sharpness of weapons is surely not preserved.
The best your mutants can have are weapons made of very dense meta-stable metal causing heavy violence to the victims and breaking weapons made of low density metals. Live transformations from small to big or vice versa won't work. Depending on the tech level, those very heavy weapons are probably copy-protected (but still can be conquered or stolen by non-mutants).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Metals are to some degree compressible, and they may be compressed even further undergoing some phase transitions to denser modifications. Plutonium is a metal famous for having many modifications and a more dense modification created under high pressure is one ingredient of a nuclear bomb.
However, under given conditions (pressure and temperature) only one modification is stable and the other modifications are usually unstable or in rare cases meta-stable (like diamond, a meta-stable modification of carbon/graphite under normal conditions). A phase transition is always mass preserving and the chemical identity of the material is unchanged, but the stability of an object is usually not guaranteed and sharpness of weapons is surely not preserved.
The best your mutants can have are weapons made of very dense meta-stable metal causing heavy violence to the victims and breaking weapons made of low density metals. Live transformations from small to big or vice versa won't work. Depending on the tech level, those very heavy weapons are probably copy-protected (but still can be conquered or stolen by non-mutants).
$endgroup$
Metals are to some degree compressible, and they may be compressed even further undergoing some phase transitions to denser modifications. Plutonium is a metal famous for having many modifications and a more dense modification created under high pressure is one ingredient of a nuclear bomb.
However, under given conditions (pressure and temperature) only one modification is stable and the other modifications are usually unstable or in rare cases meta-stable (like diamond, a meta-stable modification of carbon/graphite under normal conditions). A phase transition is always mass preserving and the chemical identity of the material is unchanged, but the stability of an object is usually not guaranteed and sharpness of weapons is surely not preserved.
The best your mutants can have are weapons made of very dense meta-stable metal causing heavy violence to the victims and breaking weapons made of low density metals. Live transformations from small to big or vice versa won't work. Depending on the tech level, those very heavy weapons are probably copy-protected (but still can be conquered or stolen by non-mutants).
answered Apr 10 at 14:34
jknappenjknappen
2,82111029
2,82111029
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'll be looking at the energy side of this with my admittedly very cursory understanding of degenerate matter, because it's pretty interesting. If you want to compress metal down to small, but still macroscopic sizes it's probably alright to disregard anything to do with the nucleus and just look at the Fermi energy of the electron gas within the metal. The energy per electron is $E = hbar^2 (3pi^2*Electron Density)^2/3/2me $ in a Fermi gas. According to this table http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Tables/fermi.html the value for iron would be $17*10^28$ free electrons per cubic meter. Which gives us about $11 eV$ of energy per free electron. If you want to cut the iron's density by a factor of say, ten, we have ten times higher electron density and an increase in energy of $10^2/3$, ca. $4.64$. So each free electron has an energy of about $51eV$ now. As said before, there's $17*10^28$ free electrons in a cubic meter of iron. Each of those has 40 additional electronvolts of energy now, which comes up to a total of $1.09 * 10^12 J$ of energy, or $260 t$ of TNT equivalent. Yep, a block of metal is practically a small nuke. Formidable indeed if your mutant can also spontaneously decompress metal.
To answer 1): The density in a White Dwarf is a hundred thousand times larger than iron, but the nuclei still stay intact in the degenerate electron gas. Iron will stay iron even for a very high compression.
2): Yes, I see nothing that would indicate otherwise. It's just very dense.
3): Realistically it'd be a white hot nugget of extremely high temperature, see math above. Having it be stable requires handwaving. It makes intuitive sense that extreme density would also result in an increase in durability though, there's simply more mass to move out of the way if someone wants to punch a hole into it. Another cool property you could give these metals is superconductivity. Highly compressed hydrogen is theorized to turn into a superconducting metal for example, so it's not a farfetched idea to apply that here too. There's all kinds of cool stuff coming with that, like levitating in magnetic fields.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'll be looking at the energy side of this with my admittedly very cursory understanding of degenerate matter, because it's pretty interesting. If you want to compress metal down to small, but still macroscopic sizes it's probably alright to disregard anything to do with the nucleus and just look at the Fermi energy of the electron gas within the metal. The energy per electron is $E = hbar^2 (3pi^2*Electron Density)^2/3/2me $ in a Fermi gas. According to this table http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Tables/fermi.html the value for iron would be $17*10^28$ free electrons per cubic meter. Which gives us about $11 eV$ of energy per free electron. If you want to cut the iron's density by a factor of say, ten, we have ten times higher electron density and an increase in energy of $10^2/3$, ca. $4.64$. So each free electron has an energy of about $51eV$ now. As said before, there's $17*10^28$ free electrons in a cubic meter of iron. Each of those has 40 additional electronvolts of energy now, which comes up to a total of $1.09 * 10^12 J$ of energy, or $260 t$ of TNT equivalent. Yep, a block of metal is practically a small nuke. Formidable indeed if your mutant can also spontaneously decompress metal.
To answer 1): The density in a White Dwarf is a hundred thousand times larger than iron, but the nuclei still stay intact in the degenerate electron gas. Iron will stay iron even for a very high compression.
2): Yes, I see nothing that would indicate otherwise. It's just very dense.
3): Realistically it'd be a white hot nugget of extremely high temperature, see math above. Having it be stable requires handwaving. It makes intuitive sense that extreme density would also result in an increase in durability though, there's simply more mass to move out of the way if someone wants to punch a hole into it. Another cool property you could give these metals is superconductivity. Highly compressed hydrogen is theorized to turn into a superconducting metal for example, so it's not a farfetched idea to apply that here too. There's all kinds of cool stuff coming with that, like levitating in magnetic fields.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'll be looking at the energy side of this with my admittedly very cursory understanding of degenerate matter, because it's pretty interesting. If you want to compress metal down to small, but still macroscopic sizes it's probably alright to disregard anything to do with the nucleus and just look at the Fermi energy of the electron gas within the metal. The energy per electron is $E = hbar^2 (3pi^2*Electron Density)^2/3/2me $ in a Fermi gas. According to this table http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Tables/fermi.html the value for iron would be $17*10^28$ free electrons per cubic meter. Which gives us about $11 eV$ of energy per free electron. If you want to cut the iron's density by a factor of say, ten, we have ten times higher electron density and an increase in energy of $10^2/3$, ca. $4.64$. So each free electron has an energy of about $51eV$ now. As said before, there's $17*10^28$ free electrons in a cubic meter of iron. Each of those has 40 additional electronvolts of energy now, which comes up to a total of $1.09 * 10^12 J$ of energy, or $260 t$ of TNT equivalent. Yep, a block of metal is practically a small nuke. Formidable indeed if your mutant can also spontaneously decompress metal.
To answer 1): The density in a White Dwarf is a hundred thousand times larger than iron, but the nuclei still stay intact in the degenerate electron gas. Iron will stay iron even for a very high compression.
2): Yes, I see nothing that would indicate otherwise. It's just very dense.
3): Realistically it'd be a white hot nugget of extremely high temperature, see math above. Having it be stable requires handwaving. It makes intuitive sense that extreme density would also result in an increase in durability though, there's simply more mass to move out of the way if someone wants to punch a hole into it. Another cool property you could give these metals is superconductivity. Highly compressed hydrogen is theorized to turn into a superconducting metal for example, so it's not a farfetched idea to apply that here too. There's all kinds of cool stuff coming with that, like levitating in magnetic fields.
$endgroup$
I'll be looking at the energy side of this with my admittedly very cursory understanding of degenerate matter, because it's pretty interesting. If you want to compress metal down to small, but still macroscopic sizes it's probably alright to disregard anything to do with the nucleus and just look at the Fermi energy of the electron gas within the metal. The energy per electron is $E = hbar^2 (3pi^2*Electron Density)^2/3/2me $ in a Fermi gas. According to this table http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/Tables/fermi.html the value for iron would be $17*10^28$ free electrons per cubic meter. Which gives us about $11 eV$ of energy per free electron. If you want to cut the iron's density by a factor of say, ten, we have ten times higher electron density and an increase in energy of $10^2/3$, ca. $4.64$. So each free electron has an energy of about $51eV$ now. As said before, there's $17*10^28$ free electrons in a cubic meter of iron. Each of those has 40 additional electronvolts of energy now, which comes up to a total of $1.09 * 10^12 J$ of energy, or $260 t$ of TNT equivalent. Yep, a block of metal is practically a small nuke. Formidable indeed if your mutant can also spontaneously decompress metal.
To answer 1): The density in a White Dwarf is a hundred thousand times larger than iron, but the nuclei still stay intact in the degenerate electron gas. Iron will stay iron even for a very high compression.
2): Yes, I see nothing that would indicate otherwise. It's just very dense.
3): Realistically it'd be a white hot nugget of extremely high temperature, see math above. Having it be stable requires handwaving. It makes intuitive sense that extreme density would also result in an increase in durability though, there's simply more mass to move out of the way if someone wants to punch a hole into it. Another cool property you could give these metals is superconductivity. Highly compressed hydrogen is theorized to turn into a superconducting metal for example, so it's not a farfetched idea to apply that here too. There's all kinds of cool stuff coming with that, like levitating in magnetic fields.
answered Apr 10 at 23:54
SunnySunny
1062
1062
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Don't forget about inertia. You must push as hard to move a bauble as if it were its normal size & every movement continues in its direction & rotation until you put in the same energy as you did to get it started. (Consider handling a piano via an attached bracelet charm.) This also means that the force & pressure to push it and get the friction to twist it is increased.
On the other hand, you really don't need weapons or metals, you can just compress rocks or for that matter marshmallows, because when you throw them the target is going to have to donate the same amount of energy at the same pressures as you.
PS Asimov addressed some of these issues in the introduction of, text of, and essays about his novelization of the movie Fantastic Voyage, wherein humans & their submarine are shrunk to do surgery.
New contributor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Don't forget about inertia. You must push as hard to move a bauble as if it were its normal size & every movement continues in its direction & rotation until you put in the same energy as you did to get it started. (Consider handling a piano via an attached bracelet charm.) This also means that the force & pressure to push it and get the friction to twist it is increased.
On the other hand, you really don't need weapons or metals, you can just compress rocks or for that matter marshmallows, because when you throw them the target is going to have to donate the same amount of energy at the same pressures as you.
PS Asimov addressed some of these issues in the introduction of, text of, and essays about his novelization of the movie Fantastic Voyage, wherein humans & their submarine are shrunk to do surgery.
New contributor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Don't forget about inertia. You must push as hard to move a bauble as if it were its normal size & every movement continues in its direction & rotation until you put in the same energy as you did to get it started. (Consider handling a piano via an attached bracelet charm.) This also means that the force & pressure to push it and get the friction to twist it is increased.
On the other hand, you really don't need weapons or metals, you can just compress rocks or for that matter marshmallows, because when you throw them the target is going to have to donate the same amount of energy at the same pressures as you.
PS Asimov addressed some of these issues in the introduction of, text of, and essays about his novelization of the movie Fantastic Voyage, wherein humans & their submarine are shrunk to do surgery.
New contributor
$endgroup$
Don't forget about inertia. You must push as hard to move a bauble as if it were its normal size & every movement continues in its direction & rotation until you put in the same energy as you did to get it started. (Consider handling a piano via an attached bracelet charm.) This also means that the force & pressure to push it and get the friction to twist it is increased.
On the other hand, you really don't need weapons or metals, you can just compress rocks or for that matter marshmallows, because when you throw them the target is going to have to donate the same amount of energy at the same pressures as you.
PS Asimov addressed some of these issues in the introduction of, text of, and essays about his novelization of the movie Fantastic Voyage, wherein humans & their submarine are shrunk to do surgery.
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New contributor
answered Apr 10 at 19:59
philipphilip
111
111
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add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
These are just my musings, I might be wrong in some things because i'm not a scientist, but these are items I would incorporate/account for.
If your weapons are made of a pure metal there shouldn't be much issue I would suspect, but if you have some form of contaminant I would imagine it would work like squeezing water of out of a sponge, the carbon for example leaking out of the metal because it needs to make room for the lattice of the metal atoms that are squeezed together by the power. Or you follow the astronomers interpretation of metal and that's basically everything is a metal that's not hydrogen and helium. But even then the mixing of materials could pose problems due to different atomic sizes when compressed that hard to reduce size.
Assuming the magic applies uniform pressure causing the metals to shrink the metals could "bounce" out like a spring when it's uncompressed too fast. Your mutant will need patience in order to prevent growing damage when expanding.
https://accendoreliability.com/stress-metals/ explains it pretty well.
Also from the same site:
With most modern metals yielding usually occurs at about 1% of the theoretic strength of the atomic bonds. Many materials yield at about 0.1% of the theoretic strength.
The reason metals have such low strengths is because of imperfect atomic structures in the crystal lattices which make them up. Often a row of atoms will stop mid crystal and a gap is created in the atomic structure. These gaps act as huge stress raising points known as dislocations.
So basically his weapons need to be metal perfect, without any imperfections. That would make his materials of course extremely valuable for the scientific community and could be a nice source of income.
His swords or metals could make for a nice bomb. Imagine a metal slab the size of a pellet, but actually is the size of a brick. He throws it at the enemy and as it lands there he releases his magic.
The spring effect from the sudden pressure release will probably tear the metal apart sending shrapnel flying everywhere, and depending on the rate of expansion send a shock wave through the air that will rupture internal organs.
It's a very dangerous power he has.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
These are just my musings, I might be wrong in some things because i'm not a scientist, but these are items I would incorporate/account for.
If your weapons are made of a pure metal there shouldn't be much issue I would suspect, but if you have some form of contaminant I would imagine it would work like squeezing water of out of a sponge, the carbon for example leaking out of the metal because it needs to make room for the lattice of the metal atoms that are squeezed together by the power. Or you follow the astronomers interpretation of metal and that's basically everything is a metal that's not hydrogen and helium. But even then the mixing of materials could pose problems due to different atomic sizes when compressed that hard to reduce size.
Assuming the magic applies uniform pressure causing the metals to shrink the metals could "bounce" out like a spring when it's uncompressed too fast. Your mutant will need patience in order to prevent growing damage when expanding.
https://accendoreliability.com/stress-metals/ explains it pretty well.
Also from the same site:
With most modern metals yielding usually occurs at about 1% of the theoretic strength of the atomic bonds. Many materials yield at about 0.1% of the theoretic strength.
The reason metals have such low strengths is because of imperfect atomic structures in the crystal lattices which make them up. Often a row of atoms will stop mid crystal and a gap is created in the atomic structure. These gaps act as huge stress raising points known as dislocations.
So basically his weapons need to be metal perfect, without any imperfections. That would make his materials of course extremely valuable for the scientific community and could be a nice source of income.
His swords or metals could make for a nice bomb. Imagine a metal slab the size of a pellet, but actually is the size of a brick. He throws it at the enemy and as it lands there he releases his magic.
The spring effect from the sudden pressure release will probably tear the metal apart sending shrapnel flying everywhere, and depending on the rate of expansion send a shock wave through the air that will rupture internal organs.
It's a very dangerous power he has.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
These are just my musings, I might be wrong in some things because i'm not a scientist, but these are items I would incorporate/account for.
If your weapons are made of a pure metal there shouldn't be much issue I would suspect, but if you have some form of contaminant I would imagine it would work like squeezing water of out of a sponge, the carbon for example leaking out of the metal because it needs to make room for the lattice of the metal atoms that are squeezed together by the power. Or you follow the astronomers interpretation of metal and that's basically everything is a metal that's not hydrogen and helium. But even then the mixing of materials could pose problems due to different atomic sizes when compressed that hard to reduce size.
Assuming the magic applies uniform pressure causing the metals to shrink the metals could "bounce" out like a spring when it's uncompressed too fast. Your mutant will need patience in order to prevent growing damage when expanding.
https://accendoreliability.com/stress-metals/ explains it pretty well.
Also from the same site:
With most modern metals yielding usually occurs at about 1% of the theoretic strength of the atomic bonds. Many materials yield at about 0.1% of the theoretic strength.
The reason metals have such low strengths is because of imperfect atomic structures in the crystal lattices which make them up. Often a row of atoms will stop mid crystal and a gap is created in the atomic structure. These gaps act as huge stress raising points known as dislocations.
So basically his weapons need to be metal perfect, without any imperfections. That would make his materials of course extremely valuable for the scientific community and could be a nice source of income.
His swords or metals could make for a nice bomb. Imagine a metal slab the size of a pellet, but actually is the size of a brick. He throws it at the enemy and as it lands there he releases his magic.
The spring effect from the sudden pressure release will probably tear the metal apart sending shrapnel flying everywhere, and depending on the rate of expansion send a shock wave through the air that will rupture internal organs.
It's a very dangerous power he has.
$endgroup$
These are just my musings, I might be wrong in some things because i'm not a scientist, but these are items I would incorporate/account for.
If your weapons are made of a pure metal there shouldn't be much issue I would suspect, but if you have some form of contaminant I would imagine it would work like squeezing water of out of a sponge, the carbon for example leaking out of the metal because it needs to make room for the lattice of the metal atoms that are squeezed together by the power. Or you follow the astronomers interpretation of metal and that's basically everything is a metal that's not hydrogen and helium. But even then the mixing of materials could pose problems due to different atomic sizes when compressed that hard to reduce size.
Assuming the magic applies uniform pressure causing the metals to shrink the metals could "bounce" out like a spring when it's uncompressed too fast. Your mutant will need patience in order to prevent growing damage when expanding.
https://accendoreliability.com/stress-metals/ explains it pretty well.
Also from the same site:
With most modern metals yielding usually occurs at about 1% of the theoretic strength of the atomic bonds. Many materials yield at about 0.1% of the theoretic strength.
The reason metals have such low strengths is because of imperfect atomic structures in the crystal lattices which make them up. Often a row of atoms will stop mid crystal and a gap is created in the atomic structure. These gaps act as huge stress raising points known as dislocations.
So basically his weapons need to be metal perfect, without any imperfections. That would make his materials of course extremely valuable for the scientific community and could be a nice source of income.
His swords or metals could make for a nice bomb. Imagine a metal slab the size of a pellet, but actually is the size of a brick. He throws it at the enemy and as it lands there he releases his magic.
The spring effect from the sudden pressure release will probably tear the metal apart sending shrapnel flying everywhere, and depending on the rate of expansion send a shock wave through the air that will rupture internal organs.
It's a very dangerous power he has.
answered Apr 11 at 11:27
TschallackaTschallacka
566412
566412
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
*Your World, Your Rules*
Having a basic understanding of the physics in our world can help you formulate a reasonable alternative for your world.
Here are a couple of articles that explain atoms and nuclei,
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_nucleus
- http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/physics/sobel/Nucphys/atomprop.html
Roughly paraphrasing the CUNY article,
An atom is about 10e-10 meters in size. Although atoms of different
elements vary in sizes, use a rough estimate of 10e-10 as the size of
any atom.
An atom is composed of a nucleus surrounded by an electron cloud. The
nucleus is about 10e-15 m in size (about 10e-5 or 1/100,000 of the
atom). A good comparison of the nucleus to the atom is a pea in the
middle of a racetrack.
The nucleus is composed of protons (positive) and neutrons (zero).
There is a nuclear force which is (mostly) attractive and acts between
protons and neutrons, and is stronger than the repulsive electric
force.
Your blacksmith could generate some 'field' or alter metals to,
- manipulate (amplify) the nuclear force of metals
- moderate (reduce or weaken) repulsive force between nuclei of metals
- add another particle to the nuclei of metals (to do the above)
Option 3 makes the most sense to me, depends upon how your desired storytelling
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
*Your World, Your Rules*
Having a basic understanding of the physics in our world can help you formulate a reasonable alternative for your world.
Here are a couple of articles that explain atoms and nuclei,
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_nucleus
- http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/physics/sobel/Nucphys/atomprop.html
Roughly paraphrasing the CUNY article,
An atom is about 10e-10 meters in size. Although atoms of different
elements vary in sizes, use a rough estimate of 10e-10 as the size of
any atom.
An atom is composed of a nucleus surrounded by an electron cloud. The
nucleus is about 10e-15 m in size (about 10e-5 or 1/100,000 of the
atom). A good comparison of the nucleus to the atom is a pea in the
middle of a racetrack.
The nucleus is composed of protons (positive) and neutrons (zero).
There is a nuclear force which is (mostly) attractive and acts between
protons and neutrons, and is stronger than the repulsive electric
force.
Your blacksmith could generate some 'field' or alter metals to,
- manipulate (amplify) the nuclear force of metals
- moderate (reduce or weaken) repulsive force between nuclei of metals
- add another particle to the nuclei of metals (to do the above)
Option 3 makes the most sense to me, depends upon how your desired storytelling
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
*Your World, Your Rules*
Having a basic understanding of the physics in our world can help you formulate a reasonable alternative for your world.
Here are a couple of articles that explain atoms and nuclei,
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_nucleus
- http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/physics/sobel/Nucphys/atomprop.html
Roughly paraphrasing the CUNY article,
An atom is about 10e-10 meters in size. Although atoms of different
elements vary in sizes, use a rough estimate of 10e-10 as the size of
any atom.
An atom is composed of a nucleus surrounded by an electron cloud. The
nucleus is about 10e-15 m in size (about 10e-5 or 1/100,000 of the
atom). A good comparison of the nucleus to the atom is a pea in the
middle of a racetrack.
The nucleus is composed of protons (positive) and neutrons (zero).
There is a nuclear force which is (mostly) attractive and acts between
protons and neutrons, and is stronger than the repulsive electric
force.
Your blacksmith could generate some 'field' or alter metals to,
- manipulate (amplify) the nuclear force of metals
- moderate (reduce or weaken) repulsive force between nuclei of metals
- add another particle to the nuclei of metals (to do the above)
Option 3 makes the most sense to me, depends upon how your desired storytelling
$endgroup$
*Your World, Your Rules*
Having a basic understanding of the physics in our world can help you formulate a reasonable alternative for your world.
Here are a couple of articles that explain atoms and nuclei,
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_nucleus
- http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/physics/sobel/Nucphys/atomprop.html
Roughly paraphrasing the CUNY article,
An atom is about 10e-10 meters in size. Although atoms of different
elements vary in sizes, use a rough estimate of 10e-10 as the size of
any atom.
An atom is composed of a nucleus surrounded by an electron cloud. The
nucleus is about 10e-15 m in size (about 10e-5 or 1/100,000 of the
atom). A good comparison of the nucleus to the atom is a pea in the
middle of a racetrack.
The nucleus is composed of protons (positive) and neutrons (zero).
There is a nuclear force which is (mostly) attractive and acts between
protons and neutrons, and is stronger than the repulsive electric
force.
Your blacksmith could generate some 'field' or alter metals to,
- manipulate (amplify) the nuclear force of metals
- moderate (reduce or weaken) repulsive force between nuclei of metals
- add another particle to the nuclei of metals (to do the above)
Option 3 makes the most sense to me, depends upon how your desired storytelling
answered Apr 10 at 17:44
ChuckCottrillChuckCottrill
1315
1315
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The size of atoms, the size of molecules, and the distance of metal atoms in the crystal grid are determined by the size of the electron hull, which in turn depends on the interaction of the electrons with each other and with the nucleus.
Electrons around nuclei behave a bit like three-dimensional standing waves, comparable to a resonating surface, but in space. The wave's shape is determined by the electric charge of the electron and proton, the mass of the electron, its energy and the vacuum permittivity.
The latter in turn is connected to the light speed; higher speed of light would decrease the permittivity which in turn would increase forces between charges, if I understand correctly. Let's assume that higher forces would result in smaller atoms and denser crystal grids. All your hero needs to do is to locally increase the speed of light. I would think that that is equivalent to locally speeding up time. Easy ;-).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The size of atoms, the size of molecules, and the distance of metal atoms in the crystal grid are determined by the size of the electron hull, which in turn depends on the interaction of the electrons with each other and with the nucleus.
Electrons around nuclei behave a bit like three-dimensional standing waves, comparable to a resonating surface, but in space. The wave's shape is determined by the electric charge of the electron and proton, the mass of the electron, its energy and the vacuum permittivity.
The latter in turn is connected to the light speed; higher speed of light would decrease the permittivity which in turn would increase forces between charges, if I understand correctly. Let's assume that higher forces would result in smaller atoms and denser crystal grids. All your hero needs to do is to locally increase the speed of light. I would think that that is equivalent to locally speeding up time. Easy ;-).
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
The size of atoms, the size of molecules, and the distance of metal atoms in the crystal grid are determined by the size of the electron hull, which in turn depends on the interaction of the electrons with each other and with the nucleus.
Electrons around nuclei behave a bit like three-dimensional standing waves, comparable to a resonating surface, but in space. The wave's shape is determined by the electric charge of the electron and proton, the mass of the electron, its energy and the vacuum permittivity.
The latter in turn is connected to the light speed; higher speed of light would decrease the permittivity which in turn would increase forces between charges, if I understand correctly. Let's assume that higher forces would result in smaller atoms and denser crystal grids. All your hero needs to do is to locally increase the speed of light. I would think that that is equivalent to locally speeding up time. Easy ;-).
$endgroup$
The size of atoms, the size of molecules, and the distance of metal atoms in the crystal grid are determined by the size of the electron hull, which in turn depends on the interaction of the electrons with each other and with the nucleus.
Electrons around nuclei behave a bit like three-dimensional standing waves, comparable to a resonating surface, but in space. The wave's shape is determined by the electric charge of the electron and proton, the mass of the electron, its energy and the vacuum permittivity.
The latter in turn is connected to the light speed; higher speed of light would decrease the permittivity which in turn would increase forces between charges, if I understand correctly. Let's assume that higher forces would result in smaller atoms and denser crystal grids. All your hero needs to do is to locally increase the speed of light. I would think that that is equivalent to locally speeding up time. Easy ;-).
answered Apr 10 at 22:13
Peter A. SchneiderPeter A. Schneider
791410
791410
add a comment |
add a comment |
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3
$begingroup$
Why did you use the spoiler formatting?
$endgroup$
– L.Dutch♦
Apr 10 at 13:55
4
$begingroup$
@L.Dutch Last questions with the story bit got sidetracked with people focusing on the setting rather than the question. I try to keep it not "story-based" and more "general question that can be applied everywhere". (First question I hadn't even put a single bit of context, but people flagged it as "not worldbuilding").
$endgroup$
– Nyakouai
Apr 10 at 13:59
2
$begingroup$
Worth noting: metals can compress, just not by much. They resist it with a great deal of force. Also, compressing enriched Uranium a few percent is precisely how nuclear bombs are set off. Food for thought.
$endgroup$
– Cort Ammon
Apr 10 at 15:28
$begingroup$
The amount of heat energy in the material would also be conserved. So when the weapons are shrunk, they would get hot. If he tries to shrink several-ton weapons to hand-size, they might get hot enough to melt or deform. In which case he'd need to do something to cool off the excess heat as he shrinks them.
$endgroup$
– Jared K
Apr 10 at 17:59
8
$begingroup$
I compress metal all the time, that's what MP3s are for.
$endgroup$
– Theoriok
Apr 11 at 6:53