Sunday, January 31, 2016

USA is not buying the cheaper and deadlier AIP stealth submarine capabilities but the rest of the world is

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Advances in modern, ultra-quiet conventional diesel-electric submarines are a serious challenge to US nuclear submarines and aircraft carrier groups

The threat of super-stealthy diesel submarines being deployed around the world has been present for decades. Still, newer boats are coming armed with advanced anti-ship weapons and are being combined with new air-independent propulsion systems (AIP) making them near impossible to find in the ocean's depths.

In 2005, The HMS Gotland, a modern AIP submarine serving in the Swedish Navy created havok in war games exercise. The Gotland virtually ‘sunk’ many U.S. nuclear fast attack subs, destroyers, frigates, cruisers and even made it into the 'red zone' beyond the last ring of anti-submarine defenses within a carrier strike group. Although it was rumored she got many simulated shots off on various U.S. super-carriers, one large-scale training exercise in particular with the then brand new USS Ronald Reagan ended with the little sub making multiple attack runs on the super-carrier, before slithering away without ever being detected.

The 1600 ton displacement Gotland Class was the first operational Air Independent Propulsion (AIP) submarines in the world.


AIP system can utilize advanced batteries that are charged by 75kw generators. The Gotland has generators run by a pair of diesel and liquid oxygen fueled Stirling Engines. The result of this unique, yet remarkably simple system is two weeks of submerged air independent propulsion while traveling at about 6mph. Kockums' AIP system is virtually silent, even in comparison to multi-billion dollar nuclear powered boats that still have to pump high-volumes coolant to their reactors.

The mall and quiet sub is even more deadly with a state of the art combat management system. It features an incredible user friendly interface. During a single attack, the system can guide multiple torpedoes at once, which can result in more than a mission kill for even very large naval combatants like aircraft carriers, with each torpedo striking in a different section of the hull if ordered to do so.

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Breakthroughs in high power fiber lasers enables four times faster drilling through hard rock

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Foro Energy is commercializing high power lasers for the oil, natural gas, geothermal, and mining industries. Foro energy can deliver multi-kW laser power over multi-mile distances.

In the past 15 years, high power fiber laser costs have dropped by 100X+ with modular, solid state construction for rugged field transportation. However, long distance transmission of high power lasers was believed to be impossible due to physics limitations known as Stimulated Brillouin Scattering (SBS) and other nonlinear effects.

Stimulated Brillouin Scattering (SBS) is a “physics effect” that chokes off the transmission of high power laser photons in a fiber optic cable by reflecting the energy backwards to catastrophically destroy both the fiber optic cable and laser source. In short, photons and acoustic phonons interact in a vicious cycle that gets exponentially worse with increasing power and distance.

With advanced physics simulations and experimental capabilities, Foro Energy developed a solution where the fiber optic cable, laser source, and combined system are simultaneously engineered to eliminate the onset of SBS even at high laser power levels and long distances.

Another important innovation is a fiber connector built to withstand the high temperature and pressure in a deep well—without requiring the flowing-water cooling normally needed at 20 kW power levels, which is impractical at the bottom of a well. The output port is mounted within the drill bit so the laser light heats the rock just beneath the drill.


A portable oil-drilling setup includes a 20 kW fiber laser and a low-loss fiber-optic cable. The high-power 1070 nm light is delivered down the well where it fractures rock, allowing a low-power mechanical drill to remove the rock. The process potentially cuts the required power for drilling by nearly 90%.

Foro Energy’s proprietary technology overcomes these and other limitations to allow “world first” transmission of:

  • High power, by overcoming SBS
  • Over long distances, by overcoming SBS
  • With low loss, through a proprietary fiber optic specification
  • In downhole environments, through a proprietary cabling package



Over the past decade, advancements in fiber laser technology have increased power availability from less than 1 kW to greater than 50 kW.

Fiber laser costs have dropped from over $1,000/W to less than $50/W in just 15 years.

This article is a follow upfrom a 2012 nextbigfuture article on laser enhanced drilling.

Foro Energy's laser-assisted drill bits have the potential to be up to 10 times more economical than conventional hard-rock drilling technologies, making them an effective way to access the U.S. energy resources currently locked under hard rock formations.



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SpaceX Plans to Send People to Mars by 2025 and Elon Musk wants to personally visit space by 2021

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Elon Musk personally wants to visit the space station within the next five years and thinks that his company will send somebody to Mars by 2025.

Speaking at the StartmeupHK Festival in Hong Kong this week, Musk said that he had already taken parabolic flights to prepare for space, but had not done much else.

  • There is a defensive reason for becoming multiplanet which is to protect humanity from a single planet extinction event
  • Establishing a city on Mars would be a great adventure for humanity
  • Mars is where a sustainable city could be established
  • Spacex is scheduled to a launch a crew to the space station by the end of 2017






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Success is the only Option!Going Huge- a Gentleman’s Blog

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Success is the only Option!


Going Huge

- a Gentleman’s Blog


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A Bird That Perfectly Mimics the Sound of Power Tools

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The Lyrebird is able to mimic everything from other songbirds to car alarms and power tools, Via the National Audubon Society Lyrebirds may rarely mimic humans, but when they do, and happen to be recorded, they are instant crowd-pleasers. The BBC’s video has surpassed 14 million views, and new ones crop up every few months […]
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Moon to Moon Blog….. Australian Hideaway tour

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Moon to Moon Blog….. Australian Hideaway tour


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Saturday, January 30, 2016

PE House / Andrés Escobar Taller Arquitectónica

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House PE is a project that starts with the idea of two families sharing one house. Each family has their own private areas but will share the social areas (dinning, living rooms, etc) of the house.  


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As city puzzles over what do about Fair Park, one simple request: Open it to neighborhood

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Mark Lamster, left, introduces panelists, from left, Don Williams, Vicki Meek, Walt Humann, Virginia McAlester and Alan Walne during “The Physical City: Making Fair Park Work” discussion on the future of Fair Park as part of the 2016 Dallas Festival … Continue reading
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Dallas council to discuss delaying 2017 bond program

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The council wants to fix the streets. No doubt about that. Everything else might have to wait. (File photo) For months, the answer to so many problems plaguing the city of Dallas has been, “Wait for the 2017 bond program.” Only, it’s … Continue reading
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Genetically Modified Mosquito May Become Weapon Against Zika Virus

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Genetically modified mosquitoes that would help fight the Zika virus are getting urgent attention from U.S. regulators as global health officials raise alarms about the pathogen’s spread.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is in the final stages of reviewing an application from Intrexon Corp.’s Oxitec unit to conduct a field trial in the Florida Keys, Oxitec Chief Executive Officer Hadyn Parry said in a phone interview. Parry wasn’t able to provide further details on the timing of an FDA decision.

Oxitec genetically modifies the males in a breed of mosquito known as Aedes aegypti -- responsible for transmitting Zika, Dengue, Chikungunya and Yellow Fever -- so that their offspring die young. The Zika virus has been spreading “explosively” in South and Central America, the World Health Organization said Thursday. Developing a vaccine could take years, drugmakers and health experts have cautioned.

Nextbigfuture agrees that genetic and chemical weapons (like DDT) should be used to eliminate the Aedes mosquito to improve world public health.



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