Ed Tarleton

977 posts

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Ed Tarleton

Ed Tarleton

@edtarleton

Royal Academy of Engineering Senior Research Fellow in Materials Modelling for Fusion Energy @uniofoxford Supernumerary Fellow @StAnnesCollege

Oxford, England انضم Aralık 2017
504 يتبع770 المتابعون
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
Our latest paper will hopefully be useful to people new to crystal plasticity and explains our code starting from the fundamental equations. Code, examples and paper are open access. OXFORD-UMAT: An efficient and versatile crystal plasticity framework doi.org/10.1016/j.ijso…
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@thezachmeister @ZPEdisclosure Helion’s Polaris demos fusion pulses at insane temperatures. It’s a big step forward but there is still a long way to go before net energy generation.
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zachATTACK
zachATTACK@thezachmeister·
@edtarleton @ZPEdisclosure Also, to respond to the second take, Helion has already shown it can be done but I don't know what's considered "compact" because the size of a truck doesn't seem compact. Compared to a massive facility it IS compact though.
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Zero Point Energy Disclosure
Skunk Works has a decades-long pattern: Build something insane in secret → fly it for years before anyone knows → eventually declassify it when it's already obsolete and they've moved on to the next thing. U-2: flew 4 years before the public knew. SR-71: classified for years. F-117: flew for 7 years before they admitted it existed. Have Blue: still barely talked about. So when Charles Chase says "we have compact fusion" and then goes dark — that's not failure. That's the pattern working exactly as designed.
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@Imperator047 @ZPEdisclosure I’m not saying a compact fusion reactor will never happen in the future. I’m saying it hasn’t happened yet. It’s not being suppressed or kept secret from the public; it’s just extremely difficult to achieve, and so far no one has managed it.
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
Can all humans share one ultimate reason for living?
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Ayushphy Cosmological
Why did Roger Penrose, an Englishman, discover singularity theorems for black holes? Kip Thorne suggests it’s because British universities emphasized advanced math, particularly topology, far more than American universities: "The reason, I suspect, was the undergraduate training of British theoretical physicists. They typically major in mathematics as undergraduates, then do Ph.D. research in departments of applied mathematics or departments of applied mathematics and theoretical physics. In America, by contrast, aspiring theoretical physicists typically major in physics as undergraduates, and then do Ph.D. research in physics departments. Thus, young British theoretical physicists are well versed in esoteric branches of mathematics which have not yet seen much physics application, but they may have a weak background in “gutsy” physics topics such as the behaviors of molecules, atoms, and atomic nuclei. By contrast, young American theoretical physicists know little mathematics beyond what their physics professors have taught them, but are deeply versed in the lore of molecules, atoms, and nuclei. To a great extent, we Americans have dominated theoretical physics since World War II, and we have foisted on the world's physics community our scandalously low mathematical standards. Most of us use the mathematics of fifty years ago and are incapable of communicating with modern mathematicians. With our poor mathematical training, it was difficult for us Americans to absorb and start using the topological methods when Penrose introduced them."
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Wolf of X
Wolf of X@WolfofX·
Growing old together is a good thing
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
🔥New preprint Thermomigration can dominate hydrogen transport in heat-carrying metals like iron/nickel heat exchangers and zirconium nuclear cladding. The first thermodynamically consistent framework for thermomigration and a simple graphical method. doi.org/10.48550/arXiv…
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@TheProjectUnity What is it made of? Aluminium Alloy? Maybe titanium alloy if it’s newer. It looks like a modified spherical rocket fuel tank. What are people claiming it to be? Actually I don’t think I want to know 🙈
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Jay Anderson
Jay Anderson@TheProjectUnity·
What are peoples thoughts on The Buga Sphere? An ancient and potentially technological relic from over 12,500 years ago or a clever hoax?
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@oprydai In QM, these symmetries are generated by operators and their commutation relations place limits on what can be known Space translations => momentum operator [x, p] = iℏ => Δx Δp ≥ ℏ/2 Time translations => energy (Hamiltonian) => leads to the energy–time uncertainty relation
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Mustafa
Mustafa@oprydai·
stop memorizing formulas look for what doesn’t change that’s the whole game Noether’s theorem: if a system has a symmetry it has something it cannot lose → time looks the same → energy stays constant → space looks the same → momentum stays constant → rotation looks the same → angular momentum stays constant not a coincidence not a trick a rule change the perspective if the system doesn’t care something is being preserved underneath this is why physics works not because of equations but because reality has structure find the symmetry you find the invariant everything else is surface noise
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Jonah Messinger
Jonah Messinger@JonahMessinger·
@edtarleton @ZPEdisclosure So there’s more than meets the eye here even if the generic discourse about the topic in the zeitgeist leaves much to be desired. With regard to if it’s possible I’ll point you to our arxiv manuscript: arxiv.org/abs/2501.08338 We’ll submit an updated version to a journal this year
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Zero Point Energy Disclosure
Why did Google spend $10 million investigating cold fusion in 2019 if it was conclusively debunked in 1989? Google employs some of the smartest scientists on Earth. They have access to every paper ever published. They know the history. They spent $10 million anyway. Either Google's scientists are stupid, or the "debunking" left enough questions unanswered to justify eight figures of research. Which seems more likely?
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@PaulParkerG @AshtonForbes Scientists love being proven wrong, means we learned something new. Science runs on falsification. No physicist or engineer I know fears radical ideas. We just need solid evidence. So far there’s none for net useful ZPE extraction, and thermodynamics implies it’s impossible.
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Paul Gleason
Paul Gleason@PaulParkerG·
@AshtonForbes They are just terrified that if ZPE extraction turns out viable (Casimir ≠ zero, negative energy exists), their whole career defending thermodynamic purity looks like 17th-century geocentrism.
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Ashton Forbes
Ashton Forbes@AshtonForbes·
I'm a healthcare IT guy. So why are all these PhD physicists terrified to debate me about Zero Point Energy? It should be easy to prove me wrong. They dodge because they can't answer basic questions about the Universe. Academia has become the clergy, devoid of scientific thinking.
Mike Jone@LilSlickDuck

@AshtonForbes @skdh This guy doesn’t even have a college degree and he is talking shit about PhDs…

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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@Andercot Very few systems are massive enough to worry about gravity and small enough to need quantum theory at the same time. Physics works so incredibly well in almost every situation that any grand unified theory would have to reduce to our current theories at low energies.
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Andrew Côté
Andrew Côté@Andercot·
Physicists: "The greatest issue of our time is that physics is fundamentally incomplete, that we have no firm footing from which to explain our best theories" Also Physicists: "That's completely impossible, the laws of physics forbid it."
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@Yearyy_ Yes exactly, it’s really weird. I’ve never seen it this bad before. There are so many of them and they are all so convinced they are right and know better than actual experts.
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₿. Yeary
₿. Yeary@Yearyy_·
@edtarleton They aren’t even capable of prompting the ai for harsh peer review! I mean come the fuck on. Dunning Krueger.
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
So many men on this app think they have developed a grand unified theory of physics. I must have seen >100 bios which claim they have discovered revolutionary new physics. BTW None of them have, it’s always either flawed or just total nonsense. This is why we have peer review!
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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@JoeECusick @Samuel_Gregson Photons are neutral. Charge is conserved because positron (+1) + electron (−1) = 0. Energy, momentum, everything checks out. No ‘spacetime conversion’ needed just standard QED. You can look it up in any undergrad textbook.
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Dr David Whitehouse
Dr David Whitehouse@drdwhitehouse·
The fake videos mask a hard truth. If you lack the basic foundations of physics you cannot go beyond meaningless sci fi memes that explain everything and thus nothing. Science is a way of thinking so you don't get fooled. This is a way of fooling yourself.
Ashton Forbes@AshtonForbes

I exposed wormhole technology and the world is blissfully unaware. They didn’t just hide teleportation, they hid the means to produce it too. Aneutronic fusion.

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Ed Tarleton
Ed Tarleton@edtarleton·
@JoeECusick @Samuel_Gregson No electron positron annihilation produced a pair of 0.511 MeV photons. I did the experiment myself when at school! The rest of your post is just word salad.
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Joseph Cusick
Joseph Cusick@JoeECusick·
@Samuel_Gregson In electron/positron annihilation, the charge converts to spacetime, indicating Quantum Gravity is two plus two dimensional spacetime t,x and y,z.
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