A little friction fail
Houston, we have not achieved sufficient delta vee
A little friction fail
Houston, we have not achieved sufficient delta vee
Ol’ George was wary of foreign entanglements, but then he wasn’t a physicist living in the quantum age.
A Schrödinger cat with eight lives: quantum entanglement of eight photons
One of the most mind-blowing areas of quantum mechanics is entanglement: two or more particles separated in space can have physical properties that are correlated. A measurement performed on one particle will tell us the result of the same measurement taken on an entangled particle.
Yes! They avoided the common pitfalls of entanglement reporting. There’s even a link to the paper at the end. Good job.
As the ship moves the pool table adjusts so that the billiard balls don’t move at all, even in rough weather.
There’s no bias toward any of the pockets, that’s for sure.
One of the more popular crackpottish ramblings I run across concerns “pure energy” and an explanation of what it is. Here is a good counterpoint:
Pure Energy?
Energy is a property of “stuff”; that is a physical system. A configuration of a physical system will have a property that we can indirectly measure, which we call energy. One cannot have energy as some independent “thing”.
Here’s an article about Thorium reactors I found via Nick at Fine Structure. It’s not particularly detailed, so I thought I might be able to fill in some of the gaps.
Th-232 is the naturally occurring isotope of Thorium, with a 14 billion year half-life, and the idea is that you let it absorb a neutron to become Th-233, which then beta decays twice (to Pa-233 with a half-life of 22 minutes and then to U-233 with a half-life of 27 days). The neutrons, as the article says, are produced by bombarding lead with protons, and would also be produced by fissions in the U-233. But since the mass is subcritical, this extra source of neutrons is required in order to run at steady-state and produce macroscopic amounts of power.
[T]here are downsides to the use of uranium-235 as fuel: first, it produces plutonium as waste. Second, the uranium-235 fuel cycle is what engineers call “critical”: once it gets going it’s self-sustaining, so there is a risk – albeit a tiny risk – of loss of control.
The unwanted plutonium “waste” is a byproduct of having U-238 around; most Uranium is U-238, and it, like Th-233, can absorb a neutron and beta decay twice. It becomes the somewhat long-lived fissile Pu-239. Starting with Thorium bypasses this particular issue.
The use of a subcritical mass shouldn’t be specific to this system, though. You should be able to do this with U-235 as well, but running a reactor as a critical mass is a much easier system to build.
The other advantage appears to be the fission products. The article states
[T]he small amount of toxic waste generated by the thorium/uranium-233 fuel cycle ceases to be radioactive after a few hundred years, rather than the thousands of years during which uranium waste remains toxic.
This makes sense to me; the fission products have excess neutrons and tend to beta-minus decay and with U-233 you start with fewer neutrons, so you will have a slightly different fission yield and your fission products are going to generally be closer to stability. This would also imply less decay heat, which is the issue that has been plaguing the Fukushima reactors — the radioactive fission products must be cooled long after shutdown. What the article doesn’t explain is how much smaller this is, so it’s hard to tell if this article is overplaying the operational safety improvements.
Bananas are extremely cool in black light, especially around their spots, which have deposits of phosphors. Banana spots glow in leopard-like patterns under black light. Chlorophyll glows red, and vaseline glows blue. Tonic water glows in black light. Vitamin A and the B vitamins thiamine, niacin, and riboflavin will all glow under black light, especially if they’re soaked in vinegar. Simply grind up vitamin tablets, soak them in a little vinegar, and either leave them around or serve them as salad dressing.
I know that the B-vitamins fluoresced, but not bananas. Now I need to check this out.
The Cutting-Edge Physics of a Crumpled Paper Ball
“Crush a piece of typing paper into the size of a golf ball, and suddenly it becomes a very stiff object. The thing to realize is that it’s 90 percent air, and it’s not that you designed architectural motifs to make it stiff. It did it itself,” said physicist Narayan Menon of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “It became a rigid object. This is what we are trying to figure out: What is the architecture inside that creates this stiffness?”