![](/static/66c60d9f/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/d3d059e3-fa3d-45af-ac93-ac894beba378.png)
I think more research should be done as it may interact with the interstitium which is a relatively new discovery and may provide a scientific explanation.
I think more research should be done as it may interact with the interstitium which is a relatively new discovery and may provide a scientific explanation.
The issue is yeah there’s one graph that’s not great but there’s also decades of research following the original publication that is not addressed.
That’s like 50% of the graduating class?
My partner totally asks me questions she hears from TikTok trends. Man vs bear, etc.
More than we can consume right now. We used to think this about oil as well. Humans will seek to reach this limit as quickly as possible. It will certainly create new technologies. However I don’t think it will solve scarcity problems for everyone since many of those issues are not resources or technology but politics. We choose to deprive certain humans of their basic needs.
I’m not certain near infinite energy will solve scarcity. Humans will simply use up all the available energy anyways until we eventually run out of whatever previously “infinite “ resource we’re using. We’re very good at this type of optimization.
Select people at random. Otherwise it’s self selecting.
You can just replace the battery easily on those right?
Doesn’t seem like enough resolution for an outline to work.
Tommy Caldwell is a high level outdoor rock climber and he’s missing most of his left index finger.
It would still have to repel the air with electromagnetic forces between electrons, so the total speed is still limited. Or does the air just stay in place inside your body? If not, then the teleporter would have to move the air somewhere.
Why would air displace so quickly?
Geothermal is really expensive in most parts of the world. It costs a lot of money to drill deep enough and to have enough capacity.
I mean it depends on what you’re looking for. For some the ability to have all the features they want and not have any small issues are worth the premium. You can choose what you value.
I think it’s a different argument where people buy products outside their means.
It’s still launched by a rocket. The plane part is only for landing. Whether this will actually work or be more efficient than ablative re entry remains to be seen.
Cheaper satellites are a good thing environmentally though, as it will be how any emission controls will be monitored.
Honestly this QA would’ve helped.
Sure that does work but it’s not efficient.
Thermal solar generators do exist but they use a liquid as a heat transport mechanism. These use mirrors to focus the sun into a single point. In general you get more efficiency when there’s a larger temperature difference.
You could also get infinite energy by digging a deep hole since it gets hotter there deeper you dig. It’s just pretty expensive.
Like the very small fridges that work for a single soda can? Refrigerators use the liquid/gas transition to move heat around. It’s much more efficient.
The only real advantage of Peltiers are simplicity and size.
Basically when there’s a temperature difference been two different metals that are touching a small current is produced. You can also go backwards and use electricity to create a temperature difference (Peltier Effect).
They have niche applications because the effect is pretty small. Hardly a realistic substitute for solar panels that use the photovoltaic effect.
I mean that just means you didn’t hack them well enough.