According to Kolby you can get AA in UT3 games by running the config program, the actual game lacks the option but the config doesn't. I wouldn't know myself, but it's worth a try I guess?
Cherenkov radiation is fucking sick:
![]()
pretty sure it's not sorry thanks for playing
it emits cherenkov radiation, which is blue. cherenkov radiation is what gives radioactive materials their characteristic glowing property. it happens when electrons are accelerated beyond the speed of light in a certain medium, if my memory is working properly tonight.
That really emits a beautiful shade of blue. I wish I understood this kind of stuff more, wonder if it's possible to do this without creating harmful radiation, as electromagnetic radiation doesn't seem to be that harmful. Yet again I have no idea about any sort of radiation as I haven't learned about it.
I've also read that radium is known to emit a faint blue glow.
Radium on its own glows blue. I'd imagine they add something else to tint it green, the same way tritium night sights range in just about every colour from green to red, and all the shades between.
e/ I hope you're joking about the radium watch. That shit got phased out early last century because it was a health risk, even in those small amounts. Modern watchfaces use tritium.
The reason for green glow radioactivity is, prob., because depleted uranium have a greenish-yellow or lime green glow to it, but most if not all modern nuclear reactor glow blue. Also the glow depends on mixture of elements. pure radioactive glow is MOST likely blue. For example, uranium with gold tend to have a redish glow.
Last edited by kid908; January 28th, 2010 at 07:29 PM.
The reason it's blue is the amount of energy being radiated from the substance, so obviously when mixed with certain other elements and when it is in altered states it does change colour. I think.
I fucking hate not having physics classes anymore, because all this shit gets really hazy![]()
There are currently 6 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 6 guests)
Bookmarks