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Physicists at the Large Hadron Collider turned lead into gold – by accident
(theconversation.com)
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I can understand how such tech would be valuable for the electronics industry. I wonder if they’d be able to turn lead into copper? Or something else? It’s an interesting thought.
Interesting thought, yeah, but this method isn't going to be viable for mass production, possibly ever.
They produced 89000 nuclei per second.
1 gold atom weighs about 196.96657 u.
1 u is 1.66053906892 * 10^−27^ kg.
Therefore, we can calculate how much gold they'd produce in a year:
196.96657 u/atom * 1.66053906892*10^−27^ kg/u * 89 000 atoms/second * 60 seconds/minute * 60 minutes/hour * 24 hours/day * 365 days/year = 917.9905991879 * 10^-15^ kg/year
That's still basically nothing. If they ran these streams continuously for a billion years, that's when we'd get close to producing 1 gram.
And it won't really start scaling much either, since you'll always need to accelerate a proportional amount of lead to near-light-speed, no matter what you produce with this method. But yeah, maybe we'll find a different method at some point.
The gold also doesn't last. It's quickly obliterated by downstream processes
You'd theoretically be able to turn one lead atom into two copper atoms and an atom of Maganese based on proton counts