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Old 09-02-2008   #1 (permalink)
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The holy grail of nano technology, assemble structures from the atom up!!!


In my mind, nothing screams unlimited energy like this sort of ability!!!!

Imagine drilling and taking a billion tons of rock, or even dirt, and reducing it into molecules, and then reducing those molecules into atoms, and then building a billion tons of helium 3!!!!

Oh shit, right?


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"We believed the world would not be the same, a few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent, I remembered a line from the Hindu scripture, the bagavagita, Vishnu was trying to convince the prince that he should do his duty, and to impress him, he takes on his multi-armed form and says, Now I have become death, destroyer of worlds. I suppose we all thought that, in one way or another"
-Robert J Oppenheimer, The atomic bomb

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Old 09-02-2008   #2 (permalink)
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re: The holy grail of nano technology, assemble structures from the atom up!!!

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Originally Posted by Gardamorg View Post
YouTube - Visions of the Future:The Quantum Revolution 5

In my mind, nothing screams unlimited energy like this sort of ability!!!!

Imagine drilling and taking a billion tons of rock, or even dirt, and reducing it into molecules, and then reducing those molecules into atoms, and then building a billion tons of antimatter from the atom up!!!!

Oh shit, right?
Do you have any non video links to this information? I would be interested in reading about it.


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Old 09-03-2008   #3 (permalink)
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re: The holy grail of nano technology, assemble structures from the atom up!!!

No sorry.


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"We believed the world would not be the same, a few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent, I remembered a line from the Hindu scripture, the bagavagita, Vishnu was trying to convince the prince that he should do his duty, and to impress him, he takes on his multi-armed form and says, Now I have become death, destroyer of worlds. I suppose we all thought that, in one way or another"
-Robert J Oppenheimer, The atomic bomb

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Old 09-03-2008   #4 (permalink)
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Post Various “state of the art of nanotech” summaries

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Originally Posted by Moontanman View Post
Do you have any non video links to this information? I would be interested in reading about it.
Summaries of the BBC’s 3-part “Visions of the Future” documentary can be read here.

BBC doesn’t appear to have put up a transcript, which makes sense, as the series is mainly a visual treat, with physicist and science popularizer superstar Michio Kaku interviewing lots of researchers on very basic, introductory nanotech subjects. I’d outline the program as having these main themes:
  • The dreadful “grey goo” scenario: a cautionary tale
  • The dreadful supertechnology in the hands of evil weaponmakers scenario: a very old, recurring, cautionary tale
  • Viva wet nanotech (AKA synthetic biology): given that all the complex nanotech we currently see in the world is biological, artificial complex nanotech is likely to be wet and meaty than hard and robot-y
  • Personal fabricators would be very cool (as anyone who’s seen a few episodes of Star Trek would likely agree)
  • How long until? Some say within 20 years – Michio (who’s a very bright guy with a superb education) thinks more like the end of the century, because of “significant problems”.
Each of these and other subjects touched on in the program is worthy of discussion.

I suspect that most serious students of technology could put together their own “state of the art of nanotech” summaries, and that most would devote time to dispelling misconceptions and separating fact from fiction. Here’s a random-ish spattering of my own:
  • We’ve had the practical ability to manipulate individual atoms under special conditions for about 20 years. The earliest example of this was, AFAIK, Don Eigler writing “IBM” using 35 super-cold xenon atoms on a flat nickel surface, with a SFM, in 1989.
  • The laws of physics aren’t different for nanomachines than for big ones. They still need energy to do work. Getting energy to very small machines is one of the major challenges of nanotech, as a machine made of only a few thousand atoms can’t really have much of a conventional energy storage system, or even much of a power receiving system.
  • While the common problem with big machines if getting and keeping them moving, the problem with nanomachine is getting them to stay in one place. Unless cooled to near absolute zero or latching onto big things with strong mechanical or chemical bonds, random forces from heat will constantly knock a nanomachine across distances many times its own length, making having it do much of anything difficult.
  • As the BBC program notes, biology has been doing nanotech really well for billions of years. A deep understanding of DNA and the cell is, IMHO, likely to give us all the medical nanotech we need.
  • Technology, nano or otherwise, involves society, economics, and business as much as engineering. As with many technologies, a “personal fabricator” would run afoul a pricing conundrum I like to call “‘The Man In The White Suit’ problem” – since it has the potential to eliminate the need for any future thing you might buy, for the collective commercial world to profit from it, they must somehow sell it for as much as the total price of everything it will ever make. This problem becomes really vexing for a fabricator that can fabricate copies of itself.
If my vision of the future of nanotech has anything unique and original to offer, it’s my suspicion that “free floating” nanotech may be less valuable than the sort currently seen in devices like SFMs, where the nanoscopic part is attached to a bigger part which is attached to a bigger part, etc, ultimately attached to a big, fairly ordinary machine.


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Old 09-03-2008   #5 (permalink)
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re: The holy grail of nano technology, assemble structures from the atom up!!!

I really wish I could have seen that show, I really like, Michio Kaku his ideas are just the right mesh of what might be possible and what is right now.


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Nuclear is the only real option!
http://www.nuclearspace.com/Liberty_ship_menupg.aspx

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Old 09-03-2008   #6 (permalink)
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Re: Various “state of the art of nanotech” summaries

[QUOTE=CraigD;235849]Technology, nano or otherwise, involves society, economics, and business as much as engineering. As with many technologies, a “personal fabricator” would run afoul a pricing conundrum I like to call “‘The Man In The White Suit’ problem” – since it has the potential to eliminate the need for any future thing you might buy, for the collective commercial world to profit from it, they must somehow sell it for as much as the total price of everything it will ever make. This problem becomes really vexing for a fabricator that can fabricate copies of itself.
QUOTE]

Excellent comparison... I have only vague recollections of that show.

What about selling the raw materials for that “personal fabricator”. It would certainly pay to have people able to replicate a machine for you, using materials you sell them, in order for them to allow their friends to also consume raw materials that you sell them. Sounds like a corporations wet dream as the device is not really capable of creating the raw materials used by the device (or care should be taken to engineer a system in that manner)

Perhaps you could use the device to construct a device that would make the raw materials for your device.


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Old 09-03-2008   #7 (permalink)
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Re: Various “state of the art of nanotech” summaries

Quote:
Originally Posted by CraigD View Post
Summaries of the BBC’s 3-part “Visions of the Future” documentary can be read here.

BBC doesn’t appear to have put up a transcript, which makes sense, as the series is mainly a visual treat, with physicist and science popularizer superstar Michio Kaku interviewing lots of researchers on very basic, introductory nanotech subjects. I’d outline the program as having these main themes:
  • The dreadful “grey goo” scenario: a cautionary tale
  • The dreadful supertechnology in the hands of evil weaponmakers scenario: a very old, recurring, cautionary tale
  • Viva wet nanotech (AKA synthetic biology): given that all the complex nanotech we currently see in the world is biological, artificial complex nanotech is likely to be wet and meaty than hard and robot-y
  • Personal fabricators would be very cool (as anyone who’s seen a few episodes of Star Trek would likely agree)
  • How long until? Some say within 20 years – Michio (who’s a very bright guy with a superb education) thinks more like the end of the century, because of “significant problems”.
Each of these and other subjects touched on in the program is worthy of discussion.

I suspect that most serious students of technology could put together their own “state of the art of nanotech” summaries, and that most would devote time to dispelling misconceptions and separating fact from fiction. Here’s a random-ish spattering of my own:
  • We’ve had the practical ability to manipulate individual atoms under special conditions for about 20 years. The earliest example of this was, AFAIK, Don Eigler writing “IBM” using 35 super-cold xenon atoms on a flat nickel surface, with a SFM, in 1989.
  • The laws of physics aren’t different for nanomachines than for big ones. They still need energy to do work. Getting energy to very small machines is one of the major challenges of nanotech, as a machine made of only a few thousand atoms can’t really have much of a conventional energy storage system, or even much of a power receiving system.
  • While the common problem with big machines if getting and keeping them moving, the problem with nanomachine is getting them to stay in one place. Unless cooled to near absolute zero or latching onto big things with strong mechanical or chemical bonds, random forces from heat will constantly knock a nanomachine across distances many times its own length, making having it do much of anything difficult.
  • As the BBC program notes, biology has been doing nanotech really well for billions of years. A deep understanding of DNA and the cell is, IMHO, likely to give us all the medical nanotech we need.
  • Technology, nano or otherwise, involves society, economics, and business as much as engineering. As with many technologies, a “personal fabricator” would run afoul a pricing conundrum I like to call “‘The Man In The White Suit’ problem” – since it has the potential to eliminate the need for any future thing you might buy, for the collective commercial world to profit from it, they must somehow sell it for as much as the total price of everything it will ever make. This problem becomes really vexing for a fabricator that can fabricate copies of itself.
If my vision of the future of nanotech has anything unique and original to offer, it’s my suspicion that “free floating” nanotech may be less valuable than the sort currently seen in devices like SFMs, where the nanoscopic part is attached to a bigger part which is attached to a bigger part, etc, ultimately attached to a big, fairly ordinary machine.
I think your just a def critic who believes we will never have enough energy for anything, and you also believe we can't advance because we don't have the patience or cooperation.

You and many other members on this forum believe in a def rant of, 'There's no energy! There's no energy!"

I think you are mistaken.

Seriously, everything I pull out you pull out a shitload of flaws no one really cares about.

But I suppose, that if we don't care about these flaws, than it will never happen. But the thing is we do, do you see?


----------------
"We believed the world would not be the same, a few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent, I remembered a line from the Hindu scripture, the bagavagita, Vishnu was trying to convince the prince that he should do his duty, and to impress him, he takes on his multi-armed form and says, Now I have become death, destroyer of worlds. I suppose we all thought that, in one way or another"
-Robert J Oppenheimer, The atomic bomb

Last edited by Gardamorg; 09-03-2008 at 05:31 PM..
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Old 09-03-2008   #8 (permalink)
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Re: Various “state of the art of nanotech” summaries

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gardamorg View Post
I think your just a def critic who believes we will never have enough energy for anything, and you also believe we can't advance because we don't have the patience or cooperation.

You and many other members on this forum believe in a def rant of, 'There's no energy! There's no energy!"

I think you are mistaken.

Seriously, everything I pull out you pull out a shitload of flaws no one really cares about.

But I suppose, that if we don't care about these flaws, than it will never happen. But the thing is we do, do you see?
Not caring about flaws Gardamorg doesn't make them go away. Most flaws are indications that more work needs to be done, a few flaws are fatal like trying to violate a law of the universe. I am a firm believer that eventually we will be able to get around at least some of these laws but until we have reason to see a way to do this it's a pretty good bet that some flaws are simply impossible to get around. Don't simply dismiss things because you disagree with them, it's ok to try to figure a way around them but don't get stuck trying to do something that is beyond our current understanding with out first challenging that understanding, don't just assume that if you want to do something you can if you try hard enough. For instance getting around the speed of light is going to take quite a bit more than brute force and wishes, if it ever happens it will be with knowledge we currently do not have.


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Love is the poetry of life.

Nuclear is the only real option!
http://www.nuclearspace.com/Liberty_ship_menupg.aspx

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Old 09-03-2008   #9 (permalink)
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Re: The holy grail of nano technology, assemble structures from the atom up!!!

I'm curious about how this may affect the world. I think a replicator will still need particles to be of some use, but where will it take them from? Will it use the gases of our atmosphere? You can't create something from nothing, can you?
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Old 09-04-2008   #10 (permalink)
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Re: The holy grail of nano technology, assemble structures from the atom up!!!

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I'm curious about how this may affect the world. I think a replicator will still need particles to be of some use, but where will it take them from? Will it use the gases of our atmosphere? You can't create something from nothing, can you?
A replicator will have to have a supply of raw materials, at the very least in the form of the basic elements comprising the object to replicated. In the "Star Trek" universe the replicator made things out of raw energy from the matter antimatter reactor, I guess in form of photons. I doubt anything approaching this well ever be built.


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Michael
Life is the poetry of the universe.
Love is the poetry of life.

Nuclear is the only real option!
http://www.nuclearspace.com/Liberty_ship_menupg.aspx

Over heard from a three year old, "Daddy why do my toes get sticky when I eat strawberry jam?"

Never wrestle a troll. You both get dirty and the troll likes it

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