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Post by Her3tiK on Jun 6, 2011 18:01:31 GMT -5
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Post by Radiation on Jun 6, 2011 19:42:19 GMT -5
Does this mean we might be closer to making a warp drive?
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Post by VirtualStranger on Jun 6, 2011 19:43:24 GMT -5
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Post by Radiation on Jun 6, 2011 19:50:16 GMT -5
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Post by wmdkitty on Jun 6, 2011 21:30:43 GMT -5
Where's Montgomery Scott when you really need him?
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Post by Mira on Jun 7, 2011 2:20:54 GMT -5
I wonder what sort of bait they set out to trap it.
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Post by Rat Of Steel on Jun 7, 2011 2:24:06 GMT -5
Where's Montgomery Scott when you really need him? Sadly, he took a journey beyond the true final frontier, about six years ago.
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Post by Oriet on Jun 8, 2011 0:03:01 GMT -5
At first I thought it was saying they trapped it for over 15 seconds, which I thought was really cool. Then I realised it was 15 minutes, and feel it's really awesome. Improving the engineering of the anti-matter trap should drastically increase the amount of time they can hold it, which will lead to even more experiments they can do with it, leading to an even better understanding of it.
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Post by Mlle Antéchrist on Jun 8, 2011 6:21:02 GMT -5
Holy crap. That's incredible. I know this makes me a huge nerd, but I'm super excited about this.
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Post by Oriet on Jun 8, 2011 8:48:30 GMT -5
Holy crap. That's incredible. I know this makes me a huge nerd, but I'm super excited about this. You made this pop into my head.
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Post by MaybeNever on Jun 8, 2011 11:31:33 GMT -5
For my part, I keep seeing the title as "Scientists trap anime".
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Post by Admiral Lithp on Jun 11, 2011 19:46:26 GMT -5
How can you not be excited?
It's 15 minutes of antimatter.
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Post by Napoleon the Clown on Jun 11, 2011 23:38:32 GMT -5
I must admit I got a bit of a chubby upon first hearing of this. Yay science.
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Post by Hades on Jun 13, 2011 1:38:32 GMT -5
I'm catching up on my Science Friday podcasts and this was talked about on the one I just listened to. Very exciting indeed. I wish they had discussed it a little longer though.
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Post by Amaranth on Jun 15, 2011 6:29:21 GMT -5
Where's Montgomery Scott when you really need him? Having mastered warp technology, he set out to develop a drive which runs on improbability.
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