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Good news for nuclear fusion, it seems that could be created correctly at the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics a magnetic field capable of containing plasma to 100 million degrees.
http://www.ipp.mpg.de/3897638/07_15
https://www.iter.org/newsline/-/2245

Sadly Wendelstein is not designed for producing power, but for creating high energy plasma and research it... but fusion reactors based on its design could be far more effective than ITERs Tokamak approach.
 
If that had happened in the US, the final NTSB report might have read something like: Probable Cause: The flight crew's failure to maintain directional control following equipment failures during the rollout phase of the landing.

One of the reasons I like the Danish accident investigation board is their detailed reports. The 70+ page report has photos comparing the failed switch to an unused one. It even lists all the snow/ice clearing equipment availability at the airport and why the full width of the rwy wasn't cleared.
 
One of my favorite passages from Brian Greene's "Elegant Universe" is where he says that that if an atom were the size of the known universe, the Planck length would be the size of an average tree.

When I read that, for a second I was just like, "Yeah, okay, atom really big, Planck length really small, got it" and kept reading.

Then I stopped for a moment and tried to wrap my mind around that.

DAMN!:blink:
 
One of my favorite passages from Brian Greene's "Elegant Universe" is where he says that that if an atom were the size of the known universe, the Planck length would be the size of an average tree.

When I read that, for a second I was just like, "Yeah, okay, atom really big, Planck length really small, got it" and kept reading.

Then I stopped for a moment and tried to wrap my mind around that.

DAMN!:blink:

When I was 7 or 8 I read part of a nonfiction Isaac Asimov book where he described the distance between stars with something like, "If the Sun were the period at the end of this sentence, the nearest star would be another period ten miles away."

That left an impression on me.
 
Serena is Awesome and I Want to Have Het Children!!!

Serena makes me happy, and she should make you happy too.

 
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There are some rumors around here, that HitchBOT was not destroyed... a strongly faked surveillance video has been published, which appears to show a person looking like a Youtube personality (who was the last person to transport HitchBOT) clubbing something at that corner of the street, that only vaguely looks like a HitchBOT.

http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meld...-Wunderliches-Ueberwachungsvideo-2767051.html
 
I hate heights. Terrified of them. Can't go on Space Needle-type attractions, get shaky when I'm 2 feet off the ground on a ladder changing a light bulb. Ironically, flying has never, ever bothered me, from the first time I flew commercially in 1998, to my first flight in a small plane in 2000, to today. Even at 6,000 feet in a 45° steep turn in a C172, when I can glance down and see the ground right below me, I don't even bat an eye.

I'll never understand it, and strangely, I'm ok with that (which is also abnormal for a guy who normally feels a compulsion to understand everything).

Exactly the same situation here. It's the "being in an enclosed vehicle" part, I think. Piloting is fine, but I'd be terrified of paragliding, I suspect.
 
Considering revamping an old story about an asteroid/comet robotic spacecraft. Now sure where to start.

:T

archimedes_v1_rendering_test_by_danirevan-d8eu4co.png
 
A single-seat US military jet (possibly a F-16) has crashed into a forest in Germany this morning (9:30 local time), near the town of Bayreuth. The fire fighting is still going on, the pilot ejected and was lightly injured, requiring treatment by an arriving emergency medic.

The cause of the crash is still unknown. First reports are identifying an unspecified engine damage.
 
What is with the uptick of F16 crashes lately? Did we start recruiting guys who play Falcon BMS on the weekends?
 
Old picture from a great-Uncle who served in WW2.

The family claims that he flew as a tail gunner on a Lancaster, although a different picture that I have seen made me suspect that the aircraft was actually a Halifax.

Pn4radQ.jpg
 
His grandfather being a gunner on a Halifax makes sense, since most Canadian bomber groups were outfitted with Halifaxes, and the Lancasters were given to RAF bomber groups.
 
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