NASA Creates Anti-Grav Field, Makes Lab Rats Levitate

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  1. Posts : 18,404
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #1

    NASA Creates Anti-Grav Field, Makes Lab Rats Levitate


    NASA scientists have created an anti-gravity field that works at room temperature, which is a big Where's My Back to the Future Skateboard breakthrough. The only problem is that it only works on mice. Mice high as kites, in fact.
    more..
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  2. Posts : 1,806
    Windows 7 Ultimate x32
       #2

    cool. but wouldn't something that excites water molecules eventually cook the subject?
    if i understand my own question correctly, doesn't a microwave do the same thing?

    i know they say it's done at room temp., but the room temp in Cali could be like 150*f...
    theres a lack of details in that article. good read though. i want a flying mouse ... it would keep the cats out of my hair. thats for sure
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  3. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #3

    They must have hired DocBrown. thought the flux capacitor was missing.
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  4. Posts : 18,404
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
    Thread Starter
       #4

    holo88 said:
    cool. but wouldn't something that excites water molecules eventually cook the subject?
    if i understand my own question correctly, doesn't a microwave do the same thing?

    i know they say it's done at room temp., but the room temp in Cali could be like 150*f...
    theres a lack of details in that article. good read though. i want a flying mouse ... it would keep the cats out of my hair. thats for sure

    They don't say that it excites the water molecules..only pushes them, I assume the water molecules take on the opposite pole of the surrounding magnetic field.


    Nah, I'm in Cali right now, room temp is about 78-80.




    It may be mean now, but when I was a kid, I sent a mouse up in a box on a kite, very....very high up.

    He was fine though after coming back down.
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  5. Posts : 1,806
    Windows 7 Ultimate x32
       #5

    Push = move = intensify kinetic energy, hence 'all the excitement'.

    one might assume either the mouse is ingesting lead enriched water (yum), or is O'Ding on vitamins to have enough metals in its body for a magnet to "push" it.
    *pondering*
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  6. Posts : 4,573
       #6

    Airbot said:
    very....very high up.

    He was fine though after coming back down.


    I have always been fine after coming down.

    For the most part.
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  7. Posts : 1,806
    Windows 7 Ultimate x32
       #7

    Antman said:
    I have always been fine after coming down.

    For the most part.
    ahh the good'ol days... i cant say i miss them. but i will.

    %root%/system/topic/mode/ -on
    ....loading....

    if they could replicate that 'technology' (of stoned mice?) on a much larger scale, then couldn't they de-gravitate much larger objects like people, and dumpsters? maybe that brave little mouse holds the key to the future.....
    -or am i thinking too far into this?
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  8. Posts : 11,840
    64-bit Windows 8.1 Pro
       #8

    The power consumption required to achieve this would dwarf even Docs' flux capacitor ... unless ....
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  9. Posts : 28,845
    Win 8 Release candidate 8400
       #9

    DocBrown's Guru thesis was on Increasing the output of flux capacitors. He's now a doctor at NASA
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  10. Posts : 4,573
       #10

    zigzag3143 said:
    DocBrown's Guru thesis was on Increasing the output of flux capacitors. He's now a doctor at NASA
    Not another smart ass scientist!?
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