Wanna see something cool #2

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Tonyr1084

Joined Sep 24, 2015
9,744
As was pretty common back in the 70's (and before), at one point my science teach (8th grade) had a bowl of mercury (about a pint, give or take) that he floated nails, nuts, and bolts in and that we all had the opportunity to poke our fingers into and roll balls of it around in the palms of our hands.

Fast forward to the mid-90's and there was this huge breaking story about a hazmat incident in town and they showed more than half a dozen fire trucks on scene and city works crews all around. They kept breaking into scheduled programming to report on the status of this "ongoing incident" all night, but never said what the heck happened, just what was being done to deal with it. They cordoned off the entire residential block, brought in the hazmat teams (all suited up, of course), spent hours deciding on a plan of action, finally deciding to bring in an asphalt truck to pour asphalt over a 4' x 4' square, centered on the spill, and then brought in a crew to saw that square out, as well as an additional four feet on one side so that they could dig a hole deep enough next to it so that they could be sure that the excavator could scoop under it and lift it out without breaking it. Then they wrapped and sealed the whole thing in multiple layers of plastic and hauled it away to a hazmat processing center. But they never said what it was that happened, but you knew it just had to be ultra serious to warrant this level of extreme caution and measures, right?

Finally, the next day, we learn that a kid crossing the street dropped a baby thermometer and it broke, spilling a small amount of mercury, estimated at 10% of it's total contents, onto the street. These kinds of thermometers contain about 600 mg of mercury, so all of this was over about 60 mg of mercury (call it 100 mg).
Once, when a child, I broke a thermometer (glass with mercury) while in my mouth. Mom yelled "SPIT IT OUT! SPIT IT OUT!" I'm sure I didn't swallow any mercury or glass. And I, too, played with mercury in the palm of my hand.

Worked for a company that maintained emergency lighting equipment all over the eastern seaboard (USA). Many of the higher amperage systems had mercury relays. Each relay must have weighed about 10 pounds, that's how big they were. In earlier years to that job I messed with some {self censored} devices and discovered that mercury enhanced the {self censored}.

I've censored my comments because of the very real danger of mercury. Though we played with it - the manor I was using it constitutes a great danger to the user. That, and I'm sure NSA would have something to say about my applications as well. Today I don't mess with such things. Nor do I give out that recipe. Don't want to be responsible for injury and I don't want to go to jail.
 

nsaspook

Joined Aug 27, 2009
16,336
Once, when a child, I broke a thermometer (glass with mercury) while in my mouth. Mom yelled "SPIT IT OUT! SPIT IT OUT!" I'm sure I didn't swallow any mercury or glass. And I, too, played with mercury in the palm of my hand.

Worked for a company that maintained emergency lighting equipment all over the eastern seaboard (USA). Many of the higher amperage systems had mercury relays. Each relay must have weighed about 10 pounds, that's how big they were. In earlier years to that job I messed with some {self censored} devices and discovered that mercury enhanced the {self censored}.

I've censored my comments because of the very real danger of mercury. Though we played with it - the manor I was using it constitutes a great danger to the user. That, and I'm sure NSA would have something to say about my applications as well. Today I don't mess with such things. Nor do I give out that recipe. Don't want to be responsible for injury and I don't want to go to jail.
We still use devices that contain mercury but not for CENSORED applications.. :eek:
https://www.osram.com/ecat/HBO Merc...stry-Specialty Lighting/com/en/GPS01_1028555/

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cmartinez

Joined Jan 17, 2007
8,783
They must have transferred the team writing product descriptions for Amazon, Ebay, and AliExpress and now they are writing press releases for their space agency. ;)
I bet one of the points they covered was "let's define among us what 100% actually means"
 

nsaspook

Joined Aug 27, 2009
16,336
It's a microchip in scale (the POP-SCI link text says 100X smaller, not 100x faster) but don't expect to see a computing device from this anytime soon (there is a huge amount of snake oil from the researches in that POP-SCI link above IMO).
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.0c06701

Strain engineering is used (various types of doping) today in conventional silicon chips.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strain_engineering
 
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