Trent Condellone.
He’s going to chip the farmland, wait and see.
1 Reply.
Chris Cole.
Here you go, the non sensational reasoning behind owning lots of land:
Trent Condellone.
He’s going to chip the farmland, wait and see.
1 Reply.
Chris Cole.
Here you go, the non sensational reasoning behind owning lots of land:
A new mathematical algorithm examines data from EEG and brain implants to learn each epilepsy patient’s unique brain pattern signatures. The system can predict the onset of a seizure within an hour, allowing the patient to take necessary interventions.
Liftoff is at 8:37 p.m. EST (0137 March 1 GMT).
SpaceX will launch its next batch of Starlink satellites on Sunday (Feb. 28) and you can watch it live online.
Energy researchers have been reaching for the stars for decades in their attempt to artificially recreate a stable fusion energy reactor. If successful, such a reactor would revolutionize the world’s energy supply overnight, providing low-radioactivity, zero-carbon, high-yield power – but to date, it has proved extraordinarily challenging to stabilize. Now, scientists are leveraging supercomputing power from two national labs to help fine-tune elements of fusion reactor designs for test runs.
In experimental fusion reactors, magnetic, donut-shaped devices called “tokamaks” are used to keep the plasma contained: in a sort of high-stakes game of Operation, if the plasma touches the sides of the reactor, the reaction falters and the reactor itself could be severely damaged. Meanwhile, a divertor funnels excess heat from the vacuum.
In France, scientists are building the world’s largest fusion reactor: a 500-megawatt experiment called ITER that is scheduled to begin trial operation in 2025. The researchers here were interested in estimating ITER’s heat-load width: that is, the area along the divertor that can withstand extraordinarily hot particles repeatedly bombarding it.
Like the Universe’s tiniest matryoshka dolls, atoms are typically modelled as particles within particles – a nuclei built of protons and neutrons, which in turn contain trios of fundamental particles called quarks.
Posted in space
What probably many of us did not comprehend is the scale of it until we saw these comparisons.