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Science - F Cancer

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by G8trGr8t, Jul 28, 2022.

  1. 96Gatorcise

    96Gatorcise GC Hall of Fame

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  2. 96Gatorcise

    96Gatorcise GC Hall of Fame

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  3. 96Gatorcise

    96Gatorcise GC Hall of Fame

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  4. danmanne65

    danmanne65 GC Hall of Fame

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    Batteries seem to get better almost every year. With the amount of people working on this I suspect it will continue but is there a limit to how much it can improve.
     
  5. Sohogator

    Sohogator GC Hall of Fame

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    I’d say 1000 mile to a recharge is plenty good enough! The other advancement is reducing the footprint and weight and if you live in a home partly powered by solar a battery will be gold.
     
    Last edited: Jul 5, 2023
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  6. danmanne65

    danmanne65 GC Hall of Fame

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    I agree but I think lifetime is important as well. At a thousand miles between charging they would need to recharge 300 times maybe but for a home it may need to charge almost daily.
     
  7. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    another quantum computing record

    Breakthrough quantum computer instantly makes calculations that take rivals 47 years (msn.com)

    Google has developed a quantum computer that instantly makes calculations that would take the best existing supercomputers 47 years, in a breakthrough meant to establish beyond doubt that the experimental machines can outperform conventional rivals.
    ................................
    The researchers said it would take Frontier, the world’s leading supercomputer, 6.18 seconds to match a calculation from Google’s 53-qubit computer from 2019. In comparison, it would take 47.2 years to match its latest one.
    ...................................
    Sebastian Weidt, the chief executive of Brighton-based start-up Universal Quantum, said quantum computers needed to demonstrate more practical functions.

    He said: “This is a very nice demonstration of quantum advantage. While a great achievement academically, the algorithm used does not really have real world practical applications though.

    “We really must get to utility quantum computing – an era where quantum computers with many thousand qubits actually begin to deliver value to society in a way that classical computers never will be able to.”
     
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  8. WC53

    WC53 GC Hall of Fame

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    That should help AI take over that much faster
     
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  9. Sohogator

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    This sounds brilliant.

    ‘It was an accident’: the scientists who have turned humid air into renewable power

    In the early 20th century, Serbian inventor Nikola Tesla dreamed of pulling limitless free electricity from the air around us. Ever ambitious, Tesla was thinking on a vast scale, effectively looking at the Earth and upper atmosphere as two ends of an enormous battery. Needless to say, his dreams were never realised, but the promise of air-derived electricity – hygroelectricity – is now capturing researchers’ imaginations again. The difference: they’re not thinking big, but very, very small.

    snip

    In May, a team at the University of Massachusetts (UMass) Amherst published a paper declaring they had successfully generated a small but continuous electric current from humidity in the air. It’s a claim that will probably raise a few eyebrows, and when the team made the discovery that inspired this new research in 2018, it did.

    snip


    They’ve come a long way since then, with Catcher and related projects receiving nearly €5.5m (£4.7m) in funding from the European Innovation Council. The result is a thin grey disc measuring 4cm (1.5in) across.According to the Lyubchyks, one of these devices can generate a relatively modest 1.5 volts and 10 milliamps. However, 20,000 of them stacked into a washing machine-sized cube, they say, could generate 10 kilowatt hours of power a day – roughly the consumption of an average UK household. Even more impressive: they plan to have a prototype ready for demonstration in 2024.

    A device that can generate usable electricity from thin (or somewhat muggy) air may sound too good to be true, but Peter Dobson, emeritus professor of engineering science at Oxford University, has been following both the UMass Amherst and Catcher teams’ research, and he’s optimistic.
     
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  10. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    I could have invented a thin grey disc measuring 4cm (1.5 in) across. In fact, for $4 million, I'll invent a thin grey disc measuring 3cm across. I've always regretted not going into the thin grey disc business. It seems very profitable.
     
  11. Sohogator

    Sohogator GC Hall of Fame

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    Sorry nuts and bolts were invented in the 1400’s I think washers followed soon after.
     
  12. WC53

    WC53 GC Hall of Fame

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    All sprockets these days
     
  13. FutureGatorMom

    FutureGatorMom Premium Member

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    But can it cure cancer??
     
  14. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    More computing power leads to better cures. Alzheimer's drug that cured 25 of 25 mice was from AI suggested list of compounds to be tested.
     
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  15. 96Gatorcise

    96Gatorcise GC Hall of Fame

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  16. gatorpa

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    Wow the average UK household only uses 10kW a day?
    My house uses about 100kW a day in the summer.
    That’s with solar h2o, gas dryer and range, double pane low e impact window and a metal roof.
    Seems really low.
     
  17. dingyibvs

    dingyibvs Premium Member

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    The issue with solid state batteries is longevity. If it's just cost you'd see it in high end vehicles already.
     
  18. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    Smart people, what’s up with gravitational waves? What should dumb people like me take from this? Katie Mack editorial


    Lying in bed on the night I heard about this breakthrough, I thought about the inescapable ripples in space altering me on a subatomic level. I thought I would never again feel I was on truly solid ground.

    Then in June, for the first time, the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) revealed that astronomers had picked up traces of a background hum of low-frequency gravitational waves. By monitoring dozens of pulsars, astronomers had hunted for correlations in timing errors from millisecond pulsars, the spinning remnants of dead massive stars. These timing errors are a smoking gun of passing gravitational waves. And that’s just what they found.



    ColumnI’m a physicist, and last week’s gravitational waves news sent me reeling
    ColumnI’m a physicist, and last week’s gravitational waves news sent me reeling - Tampa Bay Times

    For more great content like this subscribe to the Tampa Bay Times app here:
     
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