Y
Hacker News
new
|
ask
|
show
|
jobs
by
bilsbie
892 days ago
Also could be very little energy depending on how long they needed to apply the power.
1 comments
flir
892 days ago
Well a lightning bolt solved that problem, so...
link
bilsbie
892 days ago
Do you think the flux capacitor played a role in storing the energy?
link
p1mrx
892 days ago
Why store the energy, when you can just send it forward in time?
link
bilsbie
892 days ago
Hmm. Maybe it’s a mini Time Machine that steals energy from the future to power full scale time travel?
Sort of like a time travel boot loader?
link
mminer237
892 days ago
So say 10 gigawatts over 50 microseconds. So you could charge it up in about 3½ minutes from a standard residential outlet.
link
danbruc
892 days ago
Wikipedia says a typical lightning bolt releases 1 GJ, so 10 GW you can have for 100 ms, for 50 µs you can have 20 TW. And most importantly 1.21 GW for the better part of a second, 826 ms to be precise.
link