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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)HU
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2 yr. ago

  • I know the usual way uses oscillating magnetic fields and it being very cold. There are other ways i'm not familiar with. I'm a classical computer engineer not a quantum computer engineer. I'm more used to energy bandgap then spin control.

  • Warhammer 40k. I'm still a part of it. There are some cool and smart people in it.

    But there are also a large group of raceist, misogynist, jerks. Then there are the people who are incredibly annoying to play against because of poor social skills. There is always at least one guy who really needs a shower.

  • This is a bit outside my field. That said I don't think so.

    The overall crystal should be very weakly magnetic. You want strong magnet with a high flux density so the electric field can push or pull against it.

    I think this would be more useful in quantum computing as you get two bits polarity and spin. Or high density storage.

    But who knows. There are clever physicists out there that know a lot more about this. They presumably see many more possibilities then I do. If the effect can be interrupted you could stitch between states. Like turning a magnet on and off. That would have uses like you described.

  • This article is a mess and badly written.

    Basicly magnetism comes from electron spin orientation. There are two well known spin configurations.

    Ferromagnetism: there is at least one electron with a spin that isn't paired with an opposite spin electron. That atom then has a north and south magnetic pole. Like iron. Arrange all the atoms pointing the same way and you have a refrigerator magnet.

    antiferromagnetism: all the electrons in the atom are paired with an opposite spin election. It's complicated but basically they couple together and there isn't a magnetic pole outside the atom. Like in copper.

    Altermagnetism: what this article is about. You have a crystal of atoms with an unpaired electrons. The crystal would normally be ferromanetic. However they are arranged in a regular set of pairs that cause the electron spin to cancle out. Think of a checkerboard pattern where each white square cancels a black square next to it.

    The antiferromagnetism and altermagnetism both have the spins cancelled out but the mechanism is different so there are different properties. Kramers degenerate vs wavevector.

    In theory this gives you an extra state spin. So a magnetic drive uses a pattern of north and south to encode information. Ie NNSN becomes 0010.

    With this you have north, south but also spin left, right. So you can encode more information.

  • Yeah mid game the cpu load gets bad. Some tips.

    Cleaning up debris into piles to simplify physics calculations.

    Removing gasses you don't need that are floating around the map.

    Walling off sections of the map with only one door to simplify path planning.

    Killing off or consolidating the wild creatures.

    Setting dups (like cooks) that don't need to leave your base to not be able to leave.

  • Makes me think of Anton Drexler. Leader of the Nazi party. He used Hitler's popularity to further the party. Until they had a falling out and Hitler said it was Drexler or him. The party couldn't afford to lose the most popular member so Drexler was out and Hitler was put it charge.

  • His party didn't show preventing the 2/3 of parliament required for the vote to be held. They are planning on trying again Wed.

    So if they show up the vote happens and he probably goes down. If they don't show up they don't get to vote on anything.

  • There was a deliberate movement to reclaim that word. Similar to black people using the N word. It also rhymes with here. "We're here. We're queer. Get used to it" was a big rallying cry in the 90s.