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TEDMED - Home. Journal of Applied Treknology - Miscellaneous Technologies. Technology Propulsion Technologies, Miscellaneous Technologies, Building a Better Brain, Faster Than Warp 23rd Century Reserve Power Cell Devised by Robert Heckadon There are times that both primary power and auxiliary power will fail on a starship.

And so the ship then relies on its reserve power cells, or simply referred to as batteries, to keep critical systems operational on a Constitution class starship, such as life support. The reserve power cells on the ship are based upon the quantum nucleonic reactors used by the atomic planes during the Eugenics wars. The batteries generates power by releasing bursts of gamma rays that are collected by layers of photoelectric material to generate electric power. When the hafnium fuel releases the gamma rays, they are collected by multiple layers of photoelectric material specially designed to collect gamma rays.

Since hafnium-178 has a half-life of 31 years, the batteries need to be inspected at every refit, which is at 5 year intervals. University of California Santa Cruz - Santa Cruz.

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Religion. Quotes & Quips. SienaFree.it. DNA: The Ultimate Hard Drive. When it comes to storing information, hard drives don't hold a candle to DNA. Our genetic code packs billions of gigabytes into a single gram. A mere milligram of the molecule could encode the complete text of every book in the Library of Congress and have plenty of room to spare. All of this has been mostly theoretical—until now. In a new study, researchers stored an entire genetics textbook in less than a picogram of DNA—one trillionth of a gram—an advance that could revolutionize our ability to save data. A few teams have tried to write data into the genomes of living cells. But the approach has a couple of disadvantages. First, cells die—not a good way to lose your term paper.

To get around these problems, a team led by George Church, a synthetic biologist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, created a DNA information-archiving system that uses no cells at all. To demonstrate its system in action, the team used the DNA chips to encode a genetics book co-authored by Church. Your Fat Has a Brain. Seriously. And It's Trying to Kill You. | Fitness - Health and Fitness Advice.

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