← Back to context Comment by rbanffy 13 days ago How hot would it need to be do fission a stable isotope of Potassium? 4 comments rbanffy Reply nick__m 13 days ago A temperature so hot that the atoms of the potato would violently collide into each other, probably at least tens of millions of degrees and you would need something to confine the potato plasma! OJFord 13 days ago > confine the potato plasmaAnd once that's done, The Sims has almost loaded. lostlogin 13 days ago Maybe it’s fusion and potassium content increases? rbanffy 12 days ago Or you fuse potassium atoms into something heavier.
nick__m 13 days ago A temperature so hot that the atoms of the potato would violently collide into each other, probably at least tens of millions of degrees and you would need something to confine the potato plasma! OJFord 13 days ago > confine the potato plasmaAnd once that's done, The Sims has almost loaded.
lostlogin 13 days ago Maybe it’s fusion and potassium content increases? rbanffy 12 days ago Or you fuse potassium atoms into something heavier.
A temperature so hot that the atoms of the potato would violently collide into each other, probably at least tens of millions of degrees and you would need something to confine the potato plasma!
> confine the potato plasma
And once that's done, The Sims has almost loaded.
Maybe it’s fusion and potassium content increases?
Or you fuse potassium atoms into something heavier.