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Physicists at the Large Hadron Collider turned lead into gold – by accident
(theconversation.com)
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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