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by bilsbie 892 days ago
Also could be very little energy depending on how long they needed to apply the power.
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Well a lightning bolt solved that problem, so...
Do you think the flux capacitor played a role in storing the energy?
Why store the energy, when you can just send it forward in time?
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?

So say 10 gigawatts over 50 microseconds. So you could charge it up in about 3½ minutes from a standard residential outlet.
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.