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Transparent Aluminum - More Than Just a Trekkie's Pipe-Dream ?
Remember Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, (Paramount Pictures, 1986)?
Well, in case your memory is anything like my own, recall to mind, Scotty, a persona still invoked even today when in frustration or maybe out of sheer disbelief one raises the eyes heavenward and pronounces those famous words, "Beam me up!"
Besides being Captain Kirk's beamer-upper of record, Scotty also was an engineer who knew the formula for transparent aluminum. Said formula having been used as barter in payment for required special materials in aforementioned movie when the good old USS Enterprise travels back in time to save the Earth by bringing a couple hump-backed whales back when it returns to the future ...
Ok, all this time-travel and saving the whales stuff may still seem like pie-in-the-sky science fiction, but the transparent aluminum could soon be available at your local glass shop !
Solving The Mysteries Of Metallic Glass
ScienceDaily (Dec. 24, 2008) — Researchers at MIT have made significant progress in understanding a class of materials that has resisted analysis for decades. Their findings could lead to the rapid discovery of a variety of useful new kinds of glass made of metallic alloys with potentially significant mechanical, chemical and magnetic applications.
The first examples of metallic alloys that could be made into glass were discovered back in the late 1950s and led to a flurry of research activity, but, despite intense study, so far nobody had solved the riddle of why some specific alloys could form glasses and others could not, or how to identify the promising candidates, said Carl. V. Thompson, the Stavros Salapatas Professor of Materials Science & Engineering and director of the Materials Processing Center at MIT. A report on the new work, which describes a way to systematically find the promising mixes from among dozens of candidates, is being published this week in Science.
Glasses are solids whose structure is essentially that of a liquid, with atoms arranged randomly instead of in the ordered patterns of a crystal. Generally, they are produced by quickly cooling a material from a molten state, a process called quenching.
"It is very difficult to make glasses from metals compared to any other class of materials, such as semiconductors, ceramics and polymers," Thompson said. Decades of effort by scientists around the world have focused on "understanding and on exploiting the remarkable properties of these materials, and on understanding why some alloy compositions can be made into glasses and others cannot," he said.
They still haven't solved that "why," Thompson said. But this new work does "provide a very specific and quantitative new insight into the characteristics of liquid alloys that can most readily be quenched into the glassy state," he said, and thus provides a much more rapid way of discovering new alloys that have the right properties.
Crowd Power
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Jordan Yerman
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Recommendations (28)
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Paschen
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (11)
at 06:47 on December 25th, 2008
The framing for this story is pure gold. If you got hold of a sample of this stuff, maybe you could convince people that you were from the distant future, and they'd give you some whales. You'd have to hope for no follow-up questions, though.
at 07:11 on December 25th, 2008
If I were from the future, I kind of think this era would be the last place I'd wanna come to ...
The trailer is great ! Thanks, Jordan.
at 06:51 on December 25th, 2008
I want some to. Still building that space ship.
at 07:20 on December 25th, 2008
Funny you should mention this - recently finished reading John Varley's latest novel, Red Thunder.
Besides being a very good read, it's explains in detail how to make a space-ship out of railway tanker-cars ...
For their windows they used regular old bullet-proof plexiglass ...
at 08:11 on December 25th, 2008
I like it, I was on the used shipping containers remodelled and send up with Balloons and then the rest with some rocked device, once in space use solar sails and harvest Hydrogen since there is plenty on it in space all I need to bring is Oxygen and good recycling system.
at 09:27 on December 25th, 2008
Great story and intro. Sorry to be picky but I have to mention that it was not the USS Enterprise that came back in time as it had been destroyed in the previous movie. Captain Kirk and his crew traveled back in a Klingon Battle Cruiser. Sorry. I know I sound really sad. Happy Christmas!
at 09:31 on December 25th, 2008
You are correct it was a Klingon Battle Cruiser and they used it because it had a clocking devise wish Star Fleet did not yet master at that time.
at 13:23 on December 25th, 2008
Woops !
Sorry 'bout that. You are certainly right, and once again I am caught out of my depth ...
Thanks for the correction !
at 09:49 on December 25th, 2008
GREAT MOVIE, happy holidays Emilio
at 13:24 on December 25th, 2008
Thanks very much, Solar !
Merry Christmas to one and all !!
at 08:10 on December 26th, 2008
Paschen, yes, a clocking devise! It was an old ship and had been round the galaxy a few times. But with the clocking devise they managed to convince everyone it had only done 100 lightyears instead of 100,000,000 lightyears. Great feature and it meant they got a higher price for it when they sold it! Merry Christmas!