Harry Veeder wrote.
>
> Frederick Sparber wrote:
> 
> > Interesting reading Harry.
> > But you can bring a bucket of minus 77 K cold Tc from a
> > comet in space and let it do work in compliance with the
> > Carnot efficiency by letting it warm to 300 K Th
> > ( room temperature) using an "engine".
> > 
> > Carnot efficiency =  .1 - Tc/Th or delta T/Th. = 74.33 %
> > 
>
> This is correct if you are only considering the work produced after you
have
> the ice. However, will more work be produced than used in retrieving the
ice
> from the comet? The second law says no.
>
The 1908 Tunguska Event says yes. 

http://www.galisteo.com/tunguska/docs/splitsky.html

"Some have suggested it was a black hole. Others have wondered if it was a
piece of anti-matter. A Japanese UFO group (Sakura), headed by Kozo Kowai,
are convinced that it was the explosion of the nuclear power plant of an
errant vehicle belonging to extraterrestrials. A number of science-fiction
accounts have degraded the event to fantasy. Some critics hold that the
entire history of nearly five decades of field work represents little more
than a chain of mistakes. Most scientists disagree and point to a comet or
an asteroid being the cosmic culprit."

It's mass and velocity were estimated from it's energy release.

Fred
> 
> Harry
> > Fred
> > 




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