[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 5 points 1 hour ago

Cartoonishly evil mugshot lmao what the hell is that expression

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 13 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

The only reason white looks white is because our eyes co-evolved to the peak frequency range of the Sun’s radiation. Parenti is yellow in the original video because he is from a communist star system

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 16 points 9 hours ago

“Hahaha look at me I’m American!!” folds arms “I love guns and debilitating debt!” laughs “Watch out! That doctor wants to give you healthcare!” farts loudly

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 9 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

“they aren’t Islamophobic sicko-wistful

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 7 points 20 hours ago

The BYD ones definitely have a comical amount of creaking plastic. Makes me wonder how long those interiors last.

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 36 points 23 hours ago* (last edited 23 hours ago)
  1. The pervasive intolerance of religious belief in certain circles must be resisted. The elite’s intolerance of religious belief is perhaps one of the most telling signs that its political project constitutes a less open intellectual movement than many within it would claim.

A movement being open is a movement without principles

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 70 points 23 hours ago
  1. American power has made possible an extraordinarily long peace.

I guess it’s peaceful if you ignore all the wars and genocide

  1. The postwar neutering of Germany and Japan must be undone.

i-am-adolf-hitler i-am-adolf-hitler i-am-adolf-hitler

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Is it really worth it? (thelemmy.club)
submitted 1 day ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/memes@hexbear.net
[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 8 points 1 day ago

Grassmaxxing

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 22 points 1 day ago

BYD is also making these beautiful buses that are popular in cities around the world that are transitioning to cleaner energy.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BYD_K_series

Various cities are investing in these, for example in the Nordics where they can be tested in extreme cold conditions.

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 75 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

The lack of internal divisions for the Other Places really drives the point

The desert country is a barren void except for the wealthy port city ruled by a peaceful but “untrustworthy” guy who only speaks through his assistants

[-] quarrk@hexbear.net 65 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Sure, materially this harms you, but have you considered this abstract and unrelatable problem?

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submitted 1 day ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/chat@hexbear.net

“I don’t know what they said, but it was probably really cool/funny/smart/sexy.”

blushing-engels crush

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submitted 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/videos@hexbear.net
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submitted 1 week ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/chat@hexbear.net

I have been using this thing wrong for years and thought I should share

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No one explained this to me in training

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submitted 2 weeks ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/chat@hexbear.net

https://www.youtube.com/live/Tf_UjBMIzNo

Feels weird to be doing these “yay humanity” things in the context of the war on Iran. I suppose the Apollo missions happened with the backdrop of the imperialist wars in Southeast Asia (Korea, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia, …)

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submitted 3 weeks ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/science@hexbear.net

cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/11178913

cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/11178911

Archive link: https://archive.ph/6Iiag

Chinese researchers have unveiled a new rare earth alloy so cold and efficient it could upend decades of reliance on helium-3 and send shock waves through the global race for quantum computers or ultra-sensitive detectors.

A mini-fridge built with the alloy has achieved temperatures extremely close to absolute zero using no moving parts. And it comes at a time when the US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is actively hunting for exactly such a technology.

On January 27, DARPA issued an urgent call for proposals: develop a modular, helium-3-free cooling system for next-generation quantum and defence technologies.

Less than two weeks later, the Chinese scientists answered – with a paper published in Nature.

The alloy “has the potential for mass production. The joint team has recently successfully developed a pure metal refrigeration module based on this alloy material,” the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) said on its website on February 13.

“This highly efficient cooling module could offer a stable, portable cooling source for quantum chips and support major space exploration projects with a self-reliant refrigeration system,” CAS added.

“It marks a ‘China solution’ that ends dependence on helium-3.”

In physics, the lowest possible temperature is 0 Kelvin, or minus 273.15 degrees Celsius (minus 459.67 degrees Fahrenheit), a state known as “absolute zero”.

As materials approach this temperature, they exhibit radically different properties: liquid helium loses friction, mercury becomes superconductive and much cutting-edge quantum research becomes possible.

Currently, achieving such extreme low temperature primarily relies on a technique called dilution refrigeration, which requires helium-3. This stable isotope of helium is an essential resource that China largely imports. Its main sources are linked to nuclear weapons programmes in the United States and Russia, as well as civilian nuclear power plants in Canada.


According to a research paper published in the journal Nature on February 11, the team employed an entirely different solid-state cooling technique known as adiabatic demagnetisation refrigeration (ADR).

In simple terms, the process involves a magnetic alloy being first placed in an existing low-temperature environment. Applying a magnetic field forces the countless internal microscopic magnets to align uniformly, releasing heat that is carried away.

When the alloy is then isolated from the environment and the magnetic field is removed, the internal magnets return to a disordered state, a process that absorbs heat and further lowers the material’s own temperature.

A major hurdle in this process has been the poor thermal conductivity of traditional materials. While they could get cold themselves, they struggled to effectively cool the surrounding components.

The collaborative team from the Institute of Theoretical Physics and the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science under CAS, together with Shanghai Jiao Tong University, has discovered a new material, a rare earth compound called EuCo2Al9 (ECA). It possesses thermal conductivity similar to metal, allowing it to efficiently channel the cold outward.

“ADR using ECA has achieved a minimum temperature of 106 millikelvin, setting a new record for metallic materials. Also, at such extreme temperatures, its thermal conductivity is one to two orders of magnitude higher than traditional magnetic refrigeration materials, overcoming the key bottleneck of inefficiently extracting the cooling power,” according to the academy.

The ADR method, which eliminates the need for helium-3, is gaining traction in the academic world.

In 2024, Peking University built two “refrigerators” using this principle for quantum computing research, which have been operating stably for several months.

Lightweight portability is poised to be a key advantage of the ECA refrigeration module. This year’s Chinese government work report mentions the goal of “cultivating and developing the quantum technology industry”.

Currently, superconducting quantum computers require massive dilution refrigerators to cool their chips to sub-kelvin temperatures. In the future, a more portable refrigeration module like this could be instrumental in building smaller, more compact quantum computers.

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submitted 3 weeks ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/emoji@hexbear.net

Perhaps 2 emojis cropped from the following diagram:

:shapes: :maintains:

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:more: (thelemmy.club)
submitted 1 month ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/emoji@hexbear.net
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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/videos@hexbear.net
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submitted 2 months ago by quarrk@hexbear.net to c/badposting@hexbear.net

Who is with me

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quarrk

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