Liste des Groupes | Revenir à sp relativity |
Den 20.11.2024 02:02, skrev rhertz:Paul, as usual you fucked it up.>>
Not bad for my estimation (2 gr) for the weight of the cavity,
with inner surface of 7,850 mm², and thickness of 0.1 mm.
>
If the cavity is spherical, the diameter will be D = 5 cm.
The time light will use to go from one surface to the opposite
surface is Δt = 16.33 ns
>
Even if the cavity may have another shape, I will use
Δt = 16.33 ns as the average time between the reflections
of the laser beam.
>
>
>
Den 20.11.2024 05:37, skrev rhertz:THE SYSTEM WILL NEVER REACH INTERNAL EQUILIBRIUM!>
>
That is IMPOSSIBLE because I'd be pumping ENERGY non-stop, forever if
necessary. Can you get this, please?
>
THERE IS NO AMPLIFICATION OF LASER POWER, AND NEVER WAS MEANT TO HAPPEN.
>
WHAT HAPPEN IS A CONTINUOUS FEED OF ENERGY!. If you CAN'T SEE IT, then
substitute the 5W laser by a hose POURING WATER INSIDE THE CAVITY. Some
water falls out, but most remain UNTIL THE CAVITY IS FULL OF IT.
>
When will it happen with the water analogy? Don't know/don't care.
>
The only reason by which I used three days to fill the cavity up is
because A LONGER PERIOD would accumulate much more perturbations and
external interferences, complicating the statistical processing of the
electrical signal that IS LINEARLY PROPORTIONAL to the accumulation of
energy inside the cavity.
>
If you REFUSE to understand this, I advise you to go back to college or
high school, where you could re-learn elementary logic and arithmetic.
>
Say no more.
Power of laser P₀ = 5 W
>
Let's look at some facts:
>
Reflected power after n reflections
P(n) = P₀⋅Rⁿ (1)
where R is the reflectivity of the inner walls.
>
The energy stored in the cavity as laser light:
>
E = ∑{i = 1 to ∞}P₀⋅ Rⁱ⋅Δt = P₀⋅Δt ⋅∑{i = 1 to ∞} Rⁱ
>
∑{i = 1 to ∞} Rⁱ = R/(1-R) , a converging geometric array
>
E = P₀⋅Δt ⋅R/(1-R) (2)
>
Note that this is a constant.
>
Calculations with R = 0.99:
-------------------------
>
Let us consider that all the laser light is absorbed
when P(i) < 1e-10 W.
From (1) we find: P(2455) = 9.62e-11
t = 2455⋅Δt = 409 ns
>
This means that 409 ns after the laser light enters the cavity,
it will be absorbed by the wall.
>
The energy stored as laser light in the cavity will according to (2) be:
>
P₀⋅Δt ⋅R/(1-R) = 8.248e-8 J
>
Was it this energy you thought would increase indefinitely?
It won't. It is constant. And tiny.
>
Calculations with R = 0.999998:
-------------------------------
>
From (1) we find: P(12350000) = 9.37e-11
t = 12350000⋅Δt = 2.07 ms
>
This means that 2.07 ms after the laser light enters the cavity
it will be absorbed by the wall.
>
The energy stored as laser light in the cavity will according to (2) be:
>
P₀⋅Δt ⋅R/(1-R) = 4.166e-4 J
>
>
>
Generally we can say that the laser light will be absorbed
almost immediately after it enters the cavity, and the stored
energy in the form of laser light will be tiny and constant.
>
So all the 5 J that enters the cavity every second will heat
the inner wall of the cavity. Since the walls are only 0.1 mm
thick, the outer surface of the cavity will be approximately
the same temperature as the inner surface, so after a short time
the outer wall will radiate 5 W and the system will be in steady state.
>
You could equally well have heated the cavity with a Bunsen burner.
Do you think the mass increase due to the heat energy in the cavity
would be measurable? :-D
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.