If the Sun is a light-bulb filament and there is glass in the sky, then natural philosophers (scientists) will be turning in their beds, as to them a very small technological "universe" is the equivalent of garlic to a vampire. It is rocket fuel to the God-botherers though. Nevertheless, everything may not be 100% artificial; at least the Earth may have already existed before it was molded and terraformed shooting games to the engineers' specifications (or maybe not). Sulfur lamps were first researched as a project in 1986 taking four years to fully ... več If the Sun is a light-bulb filament and there is glass in the sky, then natural philo sophe rs (scie ntist s) will be turning in their beds, as to them a very small techn ologi cal "universe" shooting games is the equivalent of garlic to a vampire. It is rocket fuel to the God-b other ers though. Never thele ss, everything may not be 100% artif icial ; at least the Earth may have already existed before it was molded and terra forme d to the engineers' speci ficat ions (or maybe not). Sulfur lamps were first researched as a project in 1986 taking four years to fully develop. However, being too expensive to manuf actur e they were never comme rcial ly available until quite recently. A 1994 article mentions them below. The brightest prospect of that kind is a revol ution ary prototype bulb developed by Fusion Lighting of Rockville, Md., in conju nctio n with DOE: a tiny closed shooting games quartz sphere containing argon gas and a pinch of elemental sulfur. When zapped with ordinary kitch en-gr ade micro waves , the bulb gives off intensely bright and relatively cool rays that are remarkably similar to sunlight. The sulfur bulb gets so hot that it has to be rotated at 300 to 600 revol ution s per minute to prevent the quartz from melting, which it would do "in about 2 seconds" if uncooled, says Fusion Lighting Vice President Michael Ury. (Early prototypes also required two fans per bulb; later versions have eliminated that need.) A sulfur lamp is remarkably similar to sunlight and needs to be rotated to avoid melting the glass. Is this why we have day and night, to avoid melting the glass in the sky? If so, each rotation of the sulfur lamp would be equivalent shooting games to one Sun rotation which is 24 hours . Also, what kind of tempe ratur es does a sulfur light-bulb produce to melt the quartz glass in 2 seconds? The answer: 6000 Kelvin or 5,500 C. Mmm, where have we heard that tempe ratur e before? Oh yes... the Sun of course. The tempe ratur e of the corona of the Sun is also 5,500 C. Bec ause of the sulfur lamp's remarkable simil ariti es to Sunlight, hobbyist and indoor growers are building the lamps thems elves . You tube authors often describe these lamps as "The Sun on Earth" and "a true full spect rum". h ttp:/ /www. wildh ereti c.com /is-t he-su n... http ://ww w.mis steri babyl onest ar.co m/p.. . manj ogledov: 169 objavljeno: 10. 12. 2013
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