Sciencemadness Discussion Board

amplification of radiation by by gas molecules

whiteshadow - 23-4-2015 at 02:05




do you guys think that the amplification of radiation by gas molecules is possible ?????
please brainstorm and send me a reply soon
from.........
your fellow bewildered brainstormer

[Edited on 23-4-2015 by whiteshadow]

neptunium - 23-4-2015 at 04:48

what process are you talking about ? are you talking about cascade effect in a Geiger tube ?
your question is not clear to me .

IrC - 23-4-2015 at 17:10

What frequency of radiation? RF with a Maser using Ammonia gas, a Gamma Laser, what?

darklight - 26-4-2015 at 20:37

sorry guys my account has been hacked for past 2 days and i wasn't able to reply sorry that i didn't specify the parameters say that iam talking about a gamma laser

@whiteshadow

neptunium - 27-4-2015 at 05:11

with a nucleus in an excited state that could release ALL its energy if the right energy photon strikes it .and the number of nucleus in a higher state versus lower state nuclei are vastly different, and the half life of such a transition is not too short nor too long , then yes I assume a gamma laser could be possible.. but we are talking about nuclear property and gamma ! so a gas might not be the only solution it could happen in a solid as well,
I don't know how many (or if any!) isomer have the correct property for it .

darklight - 27-4-2015 at 19:49

say that i want to tunnel the radiation from molecule to molecule is there anyway to do that ?

quantumcorespacealchemyst - 30-6-2015 at 08:50

i hope someone can answer your question. i want to know that too

in the meantime i want to post about what if the ceramics produced to inter the U, Pt, and Th fuels display superconductivity or that effect you were writing about, the tunnelling or cascading?? perhaps using Polonium, a calcogenide, with odd properties (because it is heavier? idk, electrons shells and stuff i don't grasp yet), will break into a new technology. maybe actinide polonium calcogenides. unfortunately supposedly Polonium isn't stable for very long, with the longest lived isotope, 210, having a half life of 138.376(2) days. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_polonium

maybe the radioactive decay energizes or amplifies something.
i don't understand this yet (lasers, quantum, my user name is a goal if that isn't known, also the mystery part was too long for the user name so it is myst, the wonder and the work or something, idk)

[Edited on 30-6-2015 by quantumcorespacealchemyst]

annaandherdad - 30-6-2015 at 10:27

Try googling on "gamma ray laser". There has been substantial research done on this idea.

aga - 30-6-2015 at 13:08

Quote: Originally posted by darklight  
say that i want to tunnel the radiation from molecule to molecule is there anyway to do that ?

I really don't understand your question at all.

Are you talking about creating a 'conduit' for gamma radiation in Matter rather than an electromagnetic containment field, or some notion that gamma radiation can be directed at a single molecule, absorbed, re-emitted with zero energy loss, transmitted to another molecule ... etc. to have it re-appear somewhere else ?

Surely then the alignment of each molecule would the biggest problem, or have you never played snooker ?