Super-efficient electric motor

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Comments

  • Reply 21 of 30
    shetlineshetline Posts: 4,695member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by billybobsky

    the swiss evidently have a super secret way of generating/storing antimatter...



    Ah hah! That's what the holes in the cheese are for.
  • Reply 22 of 30
    splinemodelsplinemodel Posts: 7,311member
    This thread is starting to sound like an item description in EV.



    If you know, you know. Otherwise, don't worry about it. Anyway, EV rocks. Is moki still a member here?
  • Reply 23 of 30
    stoostoo Posts: 1,490member
    Is there anything putting energy into the magnets ? \
  • Reply 24 of 30
    scottscott Posts: 7,431member
    Other magnets. In fact it's magnets all the way down!
  • Reply 25 of 30
    kanekane Posts: 392member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Scott

    Other magnets. In fact it's magnets all the way down!



    Somebody's been reading 'A Brief History of Time' recently, it seems...
  • Reply 26 of 30
    scottscott Posts: 7,431member
    No? Just a well known story among physics types. If were talking about the same thing?
  • Reply 27 of 30
    kanekane Posts: 392member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Scott

    No? Just a well known story among physics types. If were talking about the same thing?



    Yes we are. Stephen Hawking attributes that quote on turtles to an old lady attending a physics lecture by Bertrand Russell, in the very beginning of his bestseller 'A Brief History of Time' and that is where I thought that you had read it.



    If I may ask Scott, what is your involvment with physics?
  • Reply 28 of 30
    shetlineshetline Posts: 4,695member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by KANE

    If I may ask Scott, what is your involvment with physics?



    He's composed of octillions of subatomic particles.
  • Reply 29 of 30
    scottscott Posts: 7,431member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by KANE

    Yes we are. Stephen Hawking attributes that quote on turtles to an old lady attending a physics lecture by Bertrand Russell, in the very beginning of his bestseller 'A Brief History of Time' and that is where I thought that you had read it.



    If I may ask Scott, what is your involvment with physics?




    That must be where I remember it from. My involvement in Physics? I am a medical physicist.
  • Reply 30 of 30
    drewpropsdrewprops Posts: 2,321member
    Man: Doc, it hurts when my monophased amphiboles have self-consistent isomer shifts.



    Doctor: Well don't move your arm like that!
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