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steve9728

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Everything posted by steve9728

  1. Yep. The good news and only for Chinese people is, that western China has large areas of saline soil, and a good part of that is due to the fact that hundreds of millions of years ago this was an ancient ocean. That means that if it's true that the oceans can no longer provide seafood that people can feel comfortable with, we can still ration the water by ourselves in the right proportions for inland mariculture in these places where nothing can be grown nowadays. And the experiments for this have been proven successful. But the innocent fishermen who have been affected or will be affected have no choice, none at all. And that is happening in Japan.
  2. If there are physicists, chemists, customs and food control authorities in marine life, with no ocean current, of corse. IAEA make a online website shows some data making it feels like real-time. But actually, nope. The last time they analyzed the results of the water in the ALPS pools before discharge was June 22. And it was the 1000 nuclides that were reduced to 210, then went to 62, and only measured 29 of this finally. Currently, the data that IAEA only showing is the upstream impoundment and only testing the tritium - forget those 29 nuclides people! And it’s just a sample test, with only 0.5L of several hundred tons of water tested. And they haven’t measured those since June - I don’t know that much about radiation, but I still know how long it takes from June to August Every second of the entire Fukushima incident, from the time it hadn’t affected by the tsunami to the present, has been filled with greed, irresponsibility and cover-ups. From the local people, to normal Japanese people, it’s now just a matter of trying to deceiving all mankind and dragging the whole world down with them. “If this water is safe, there’s no need to discharge it into the sea, and if it isn’t, it should not be discharged into the sea”
  3. Hopefully, some of their students who were studying abroad in their northern neighbours will notice that they need to change some of the data used for ICBM... At least ask the teachers... "Comrades, there's a huge difference between launching something up and blowing something up." But for them, and for this rocket, the failure of the third stage may also be a problem they didn't expect, after all, the previous launches hadn't progressed to this point.
  4. No offence, or like the DPRK in For All Mankind "Guess what, we are the first who made it to Mars!" But, yeah, congratulations to India!
  5. How long it takes will those things arrive in Shanghai and San Diego? Here's a 2021 article: Discharge of treated Fukushima nuclear accident contaminated water: macroscopic and microscopic simulations When they started to discharge it was 12:00 pm China time today - I was having lunch. I saw one of the reporters who was on the Fukushima coast carrying a Geiger counter, standing right there and not moving any. As 12 o'clock passed, the counter which had been at 0μSv/h for past at least 5 minutes, slowly rose to 0.5, then reached 0.7. I sincerely hope it's just the radioactive dust blowing up because of the sea breeze rather than the seawater actually having something else strange in it - it's perfectly safe as the Japanese government thinks. And, this discharge will last for 30 years. The good news is that this planet's oceans are large enough that the water will inevitably dilute this nuclear-contaminated waste. The bad news is that we've all learnt the common sense of biological food chain truism: this stuff will gradually enrich as it moves up the food chain.
  6. Alright, the worst ever science news: Japan started discharging the nuclear wastewater in Fukushima RIGHT NOW As a Chinese who has elders in the family who were the victim of WW2 like many other Chinese, you can imagine what I want to curse. Since ancient times, Japan has been a civilization closely linked to the fishing industry. I really can't understand why they would choose to do that. Maybe in a while, we will see irresponsible b**t like "the Japanese of the past are the Japanese of the past, and the Japanese of the present are also the victims". I don't hear any "How dare you" from Western media. But I'm not a bit surprised.
  7. Agree with that. But today is the big day for them, just give them some little tolerance
  8. Even though I've cracked the wrist bones in both my hands from heavy wrestling, have to say I really hard to accept replacing them with metal. It can be like wearable like the current exoskeleton for helping me lift weights and run faster, but put them into my body... ah no thanks.
  9. One way of "flattening" costs is through subsequent large-scale production capacity and a highly developed transportation system. It would be better if these resources could be used to produce high-value-added products or services in ways that are easier than on Earth. But to implement these simple words seems worth tons of money.
  10. It also is the world's first high-orbit SAR satellite. Honestly, I really curious how this radar antenna of this shape unfolds.
  11. As expected, he said there’s nothing different between costal city and plateau: one of his friends who was traveling with them drove Mercedes-Benz GLS and had problems with insufficient horsepower when climbing because of the lack of oxygen at four thousand meters above sea level. But this doesn’t have anything to do with EV. The only factor that can affect it is the temperature. But he said it’s around 16 to 26 ℃. Which is the best temp for the batteries I think. If my memory is correct, there’s somewhere around 4500m in elevation they nearby. Don’t know their travel plan, or they have just been there lol
  12. August 21, 2023, at 1:45 CST, CZ-4C Y56 successfully launched Gaofen-12 04 satellite from JSLC. The satellite entered the predetermined orbit. It's mainly used in the fields of land census, urban planning, land right determination, road network design, crop estimation, and disaster prevention and mitigation. https://weibo.com/2803301701/LzLaLmSUP?refer_flag=1001030103_ The mission patch this time: via.https://weibo.com/6142289604/NfwtM6ps1
  13. As much as I hate this idea of "curse", and as much as I wish sincerely that there can have a country or an organization that could "break the curse". But... I don't think there's anything I can say against it from an objective point of view. Hope India can make it.
  14. Science: LK-99 isn’t a superconductor — how science sleuths solved the mystery It is not a superconductor or even a conductor, but an insulator. I think this is over, really solidly. Decades later (or maybe more) if mankind really finds something room-temp superconductor, LK-99 may not make it into the textbooks, but it will certainly be attached as a footnote. At least, as a "fun fact".
  15. Full video in 03:11: Tiangong TV S05E14: Let's Go Through the Modules! (Tiangong TV S05E13: The Gears Are Turning! Basic Space Fluid Mechanics Experiment in Progress, S05E12: First workout of the fall. Let's go?)
  16. Xinhua: Chinese scientists achieve de novo artificial synthesis of hexoses from CO2 The paper itself: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2095927323005510?via%3Dihub "The reaction time of the whole set of experiments was about 17 hours. Compared with the traditional method of extracting sugar from crops such as sugar cane, the duration of sugar acquisition has made the leap from 'years' to 'hours'."
  17. DJI launched a new delivery drone. It looks a lot more serious than the drones that some delivery companies in China have been assembling for themselves for a while now. Meanwhile in the UK: UK's first drone mail service begins in Orkney
  18. By Jilin-1 official WeChat Account: https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/8zYXDzWNdq1Sj2ha3irNpQ Damn
  19. Taken on the way home from work, looks pregnant.
  20. Watched a video by Chinese National Geography about the biologists have discovered a new wild population of giant salamanders in Jiangxi, China - that is genetically pure and with a stable breeding ground. Science reprinted their article last May.
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