Cientificos de Japon muy borrachos hacen descubrimiento



Yoshihiko Takano y otros cientificos de Japon muy borrachos , hacen una fiestita en el laboratorio y tiran vino en superconductores. Y asi descubren que el alcohol mejora la superconductividad..


http://io9.com/5731129/drunken-scientists-pour-alcohol-on-superconductors-and-make-an-incredible-discovery


Wine makes superconductors better at their jobs. And apparently, it makes some scientists better at their jobs too.

Superconductors behave like most metals; they conduct electricity. They do so, however, with a twist. All metal has some resistance to the flow of electricity. But when the temperature drops, superconductors get less and less resistant (and therefore more conductive). When they reach very low temperatures, their resistance drops to zero.

Yoshihiko Takano and other researchers at the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan were in the process of creating a certain kind of superconductor by putting a compound in hot water and soaking it for hours. They also soaked the compound in a mixture of water and ethanol. It appears the process was going well, because the scientists decided to have a little party. The party included sake, whisky, various wines, shochu, and beer. At a certain point, the researchers decided to try soaking the compound in the many, many liquors they had on hand and seeing how they compared to the more conventional soaking liquids.

When they tested the resulting materials for superconductivity, they found that the ones soaked in commercial booze came out ahead. About 15 percent of the material became a superconductor for the water mixed with ethanol, and less for the pure water. By comparison, Shochu jacked up conductivity by 23 percent and red wine managed to supercharge over 62 percent of the material. The scientists were pleased, if bemused with their results.

So, a little sip of something turns out to make potential superconductors much better at their jobs. And, perhaps, scientists better at their jobs as well.

Lighthouse family - High

Kerri Chandler - In The Morning #house

Desde hoy ,cuidado al comparar. Mas precavidos de aquello que damos por hecho.Veamos lo bueno de cada situacion y demos gracias a quienes lo merecen .Las cosas chicas tambien importan
Hay gente que se pasa la vida haciendo cosas que no deberia ,para ganar dinero que le falta y comprar cosas que no necesita, para impresionar a gente que no le importa

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Jamiroquai - 7 Days... (BBC Electric Proms 06 4/6)

Mother (A Chillout Experience)

"No todos repiten los chismes que oyen, algunos los mejoran"

Si el que dispara es blanco "es un loco",pero si es arabe es un "terrorista".

DINERO & FALSA MORAL , Si una persona desequilibrada tiene dinero , "tiene problemas", si no lo tiene es "un/a loco/a para el manicomio"......si una mujer promiscua tiene dinero "es muy liberal"..si no lo tiene "es una put.. barata " ..

Si el que dispara es blanco "es un loco",pero si es arabe es un "terrorista".

Why Is Nobody Calling Jared Loughner a Terrorist? - Culture - GOOD

Jared Lee Loughner allegedly tried to assassinate Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords at a meeting with constituents in Tucson, Arizona, on Saturday. In the wake of the attack, the 22-year-old Loughner has been called everything from “crazed” to “unhinged.” What he’s not been called, however, at least by the media, is a terrorist.

According to the United States Law Code, terrorism is “premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncombatant targets by subnational groups or clandestine agents.” New evidence alleges that Loughner possibly planned for years to assassinate Giffords, a prominent politician. Sounds a lot like terrorism to me. But a whole host of major media outlets seem to disagree.

The Wall Street Journal today says Loughner “raged against the government” and “discussed terrorism,” which, when you actually think about it, is a vague, nearly meaningless sentence (who hasn’t discussed terrorism in the past decade?). In the Atlanta Journal Constitution, the main story is that Loughner was denied entry into the military because he failed a drug test, while the only talk of terrorism comes in a confusing quote from a blog posting from Loughner himself: "If you call me a terrorist then the argument to call me a terrorist is ad hominem.” And, in the Los Angeles Timeslead story on Loughner today, the word “terror” doesn’t appear once.

Compare this nebulous coverage to that on Nidal Hasan in November 2009. If you’ll remember, Hasan is the only suspect in the Fort Hood shooting in Texas that left 13 people dead and 30 more wounded. Hasan is also Muslim, a fact every news outlet won’t let you forget, while also speculating about his terrorist ties.

Four days after the attack on Fort Hood, the Wall Street Journal published two stories suggesting that Hasan was a terrorist, one of which included the assertion that it was a terrorist act because Hasan spoke Arabic while he shot. The Los Angeles Times spoke to counterterrorism experts for this piece on Hasan. And, in the Atlanta Journal Constitution, blogger Kyle Wingfield actually gave credence to a Forbes argument claiming that Hasan “went Muslim.”

Some will argue that Hasan’s terrorist intentions were proved by communications he had with radical cleric Anwar al Awlaki, but, in fact, experts who reviewed the pair’s e-mail exchange deemed it totally innocuous.

It should be noted that the FBI Director Robert Mueller has said he's not ruling out terrorism charges against Loughner, but nothing's certain yet. And today in Dubai, Hillary Clinton called Loughner an "extremist," though, like the media, she stopped short of calling him a terrorist. From the sidelines, the message this sends is pretty obvious and very insidious: When a white man executes a political attack, he’s likely crazy; when it’s a Muslim doing the shooting, he’s likely a terrorist.

Paul Weller & Amy Winehouse I Heard It Through The Grapevine

HQ - Style Council - Shout to the Top - Top of the Pops 1984

Arbol Familiar 1500 al 1200

Alfonso III Rey de Portugal

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Ocho Generaciones de Abuelos hasta el 1200

Imposible como caminar en linea recta sin un punto de referencia.

A Mystery: Why Can't We Walk Straight? from NPR on Vimeo.

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Lo que se llamo Paraguay en tiempos de la corona


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Ocho generaciones de abuelos hasta 1500

iConcerts - James Morrison - You Give Me Something (live)

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Ramon Mera sentado a la izquierda es mi bisabuelo.
Jesus Mera sentado a la derecha , mi Tio Bisabuelo (*)
notable mi parecido con mi Tio Bisabuelo


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"Las familias que fundaron Asuncion en tiempos de la colonia, fundaron la segunda Buenos Aires. Las familias de la Segunda Buenos Aires , fundaron Montevideo.  La relacion sanguinea de las familias con mas de 400 años en el Rio de la Plata tienen la misma sangre, el mismo ADN  y  la misma historia en comun . A veces me pregunto ¿que habra sido lo que alejo tanto la forma de ser de la mujer rioplatense de la paraguaya? La paraguaya hace que el hombre crea que es el rey , y sin duda la unica reina es ella." @trompo







Seis generaciones de abuelos
hasta Dn.Jose Gervasio Artigas

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