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by raattgift
989 days ago
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I don't know enough about neutron physics to comment usefully on your mean free path logic, but I do know that solar eruptive activity can launch relativistic neutrons at Earth which can be detected even at sea level using scintillators, and that mountaintop detection has been around since the early 1980s. Shibata 1994, Propagation of Solar Neutrons <https://sci-hub.se/https://doi.org/10.1029/93JA03175>, §4.2.1 (Fig 3) higher energy neutrons get further into the atmosphere, so I don't think the atmosphere is much of a barrier for the comparable (MeV-GeV) teleported neutron-star neutrons. We seem to agree that free neutrons don't stay free neutrons when they slam into the solid earth. I too wanted to think about neutrons as a non-self-interacting gas, but that just doesn't work: Meyer 1994, https://ned.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Sept01/Meyer/Meyer3.html (Paragraph beginning with, "Only the strong gravity of the neutron star keeps such matter from exploding apart." Cold in this context is partly explained in the preceding paragraph; in inner regions the matter is a degenerate gas meaning the particle kinetic energy becomes dependent on the density or equivalently pressure becomes independent of temperature; even at enormous pressures, degenerate gases don't hold much thermal energy -- that was practically all radiated away when the NS was young. Our teleporting (of inner region matter) therefore engages a very low-entropy r-process. Outer regions are just too complicated and varied for a HN comment. The crust is thin -- a few to a few hundred metres or so compared to an NS radius of ~ 10km. It's also much less dense, so is a small fraction of the NS mass, and thus maybe not a target for our teleportation. Here's a 180-page open access review: https://link.springer.com/article/10.12942/lrr-2008-10 Pesky electrons and protons complicating things. |
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> Shibata 1994, Propagation of Solar Neutrons <https://sci-hub.se/https://doi.org/10.1029/93JA03175>
If I'm reading that figure right, at sea level the attenuation is at least a factor of 2000 for all energies they're graphing. That sounds about right to me.
I realise now that I may have been unclear in intent previously: if you look at figure 2, and then consider a typical solid or liquid's cross sectional mass density, hopefully that explains why I was speaking of neutron mean free path of centimetres — 100g/cm^2 is 1m of water.
However this is just the initial condition, and I don't think this scenario is one where the atmospheric density can be accurately approximated as constant over time.