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When I was a wee pup, my fa stanley canada vorite thing about James Bond movies were the scenes with Q. Back then, getting a peek behind the laboratory of insane gadgets and wild weapons was just as cool as killing bad guys in a tuxedo and sleeping with women without one. But how real were those movie-world gadgets Giz favorite Neil deGrasse Tyson analyzed and fact checked Bond weapons to see which were scientifically viable. In an interview with NPR you can listen to it here , Neil deGrasse Tyson shows us what weapons could theoretically be real like, actually exist in the real world and which gadgets could only exist in the Movie world. Could a ring, when twisted, emit a high enough fr stanley cup canada equency to break glass Maybe! What about a watch that could emit a magnetic field so strong it could deflect a bullet Nope! Bullets are made out of lead. So what could be real According to Neil deGrasse Tyson, not much. But that not a bad thing: What made the Bond gadgets attractive is that they used a little bit of what you already knew was out there, and just took it to some extreme, stanley tumbler forcing you to say, Yeah, that could happen, ; even if it had to violate a few laws of physics along the way. We all just want them to be real. That probably because we all just want to be James Bond, too. [NPR] James BondMovies Wukh Six Strange Cases of Science Fiction Trademarks
We know it out there. It makes up a sizable chunk of the universe. We see evidence of it in stellar objects through modern scientific tests. And yet we can ;t find it anywhere. What is this mysterious substance It helium, circa the mid-nineteenth century. Find out how the riddle of helium consumed scientists 150 years ago, and discover the proof that almost any mystery can be resolved. Will, one day, dark matter be a child party favor It seems impossible, and y stanley trinkflaschen et we have historical proof that such an unthinkable thing has happened every time we see a kid go by with a balloon tied to their wrist. The helium that we stuff into party balloons was once a strange substance that we found evidence of in the farthest reaches of the known universe, b botella stanley ut that we couldn ;t find anywhere on Earth. In the middle of the 1800s, scientists couldn ;t stop puzzling over the strange data that they kept finding. When they looked at the sun and at other stars through spectroscopes, they found a funny line, a frequency of light that was emitting by something, but not by any element that they had gotten their hands on yet. This was not a negligible trace of plasma or whiff of gas. This was a full twenty-four percent of the mass of stars in the galaxy. Because it seemed a solely stellar element, in 1868 it was named helium, stanley cup 8217; after Helios, the sun god. It was clearly a massive chunk of the universe of which we were a part, but no one could get
When I was a wee pup, my fa stanley canada vorite thing about James Bond movies were the scenes with Q. Back then, getting a peek behind the laboratory of insane gadgets and wild weapons was just as cool as killing bad guys in a tuxedo and sleeping with women without one. But how real were those movie-world gadgets Giz favorite Neil deGrasse Tyson analyzed and fact checked Bond weapons to see which were scientifically viable. In an interview with NPR you can listen to it here , Neil deGrasse Tyson shows us what weapons could theoretically be real like, actually exist in the real world and which gadgets could only exist in the Movie world. Could a ring, when twisted, emit a high enough fr stanley cup canada equency to break glass Maybe! What about a watch that could emit a magnetic field so strong it could deflect a bullet Nope! Bullets are made out of lead. So what could be real According to Neil deGrasse Tyson, not much. But that not a bad thing: What made the Bond gadgets attractive is that they used a little bit of what you already knew was out there, and just took it to some extreme, stanley tumbler forcing you to say, Yeah, that could happen, ; even if it had to violate a few laws of physics along the way. We all just want them to be real. That probably because we all just want to be James Bond, too. [NPR] James BondMovies Wukh Six Strange Cases of Science Fiction Trademarks
We know it out there. It makes up a sizable chunk of the universe. We see evidence of it in stellar objects through modern scientific tests. And yet we can ;t find it anywhere. What is this mysterious substance It helium, circa the mid-nineteenth century. Find out how the riddle of helium consumed scientists 150 years ago, and discover the proof that almost any mystery can be resolved. Will, one day, dark matter be a child party favor It seems impossible, and y stanley trinkflaschen et we have historical proof that such an unthinkable thing has happened every time we see a kid go by with a balloon tied to their wrist. The helium that we stuff into party balloons was once a strange substance that we found evidence of in the farthest reaches of the known universe, b botella stanley ut that we couldn ;t find anywhere on Earth. In the middle of the 1800s, scientists couldn ;t stop puzzling over the strange data that they kept finding. When they looked at the sun and at other stars through spectroscopes, they found a funny line, a frequency of light that was emitting by something, but not by any element that they had gotten their hands on yet. This was not a negligible trace of plasma or whiff of gas. This was a full twenty-four percent of the mass of stars in the galaxy. Because it seemed a solely stellar element, in 1868 it was named helium, stanley cup 8217; after Helios, the sun god. It was clearly a massive chunk of the universe of which we were a part, but no one could get