CrashBomb
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Research scientists at A.S.U. have discovered a way to make "nanobots" more powerful.
The problem with nanomachines is their physical weakness and lack of speed. They're just not strong enough to carry cargo or get anywhere quickly enough to do the important things people envision them doing. Now, however, they're fuel injected and turbocharged.
Using hydrazine (a monopropellant rocket fuel) they actually got a group of them to move at 200 microns per second, which is 100 times their body length. 200 microns isn't very far, but it's still incredibly fast for their size. That translates into almost 900 scale mph. Imagine having a 13 foot long car that could cover 1300 feet in one second. That's a ONE SECOND quarter mile.
This is the future of every technology on earth.
<span style='color:red'>Full article: Read and be amazed</span>
The problem with nanomachines is their physical weakness and lack of speed. They're just not strong enough to carry cargo or get anywhere quickly enough to do the important things people envision them doing. Now, however, they're fuel injected and turbocharged.
Using hydrazine (a monopropellant rocket fuel) they actually got a group of them to move at 200 microns per second, which is 100 times their body length. 200 microns isn't very far, but it's still incredibly fast for their size. That translates into almost 900 scale mph. Imagine having a 13 foot long car that could cover 1300 feet in one second. That's a ONE SECOND quarter mile.
This is the future of every technology on earth.
<span style='color:red'>Full article: Read and be amazed</span>