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NONE_dc ,
@NONE_dc@lemmy.world avatar

Room temperature superconductors. Those things are insane, but by now, as far as I know , the only way to create them is with extremely low temperatures.

fox ,

Room temperature superconductors would represent the greatest leap forward since electricity itself. Ultra-cheap, ultra-high resolution MRIs, lossless power transmission across vast distances, massive gains in computing power, much lower cost supercolliders for advanced physics, low-cost magnetic confinement for fusion power experiments, and so on.

ChrislyBear ,

More efficient or even lossless, sustainable energy storage.

unn ,

AGI

shinigamiookamiryuu ,
MummifiedClient5000 ,

Yeah… I’m not going to tell intelligent sea mammals where pollution comes from.

Kuori ,
@Kuori@hexbear.net avatar

If you don’t tell your sea life who’s doing the polluting, then transgender communists will.

Please. Talk to your local sea life about pollution.

(Brought to you by the Committee for Orca Attacks)

chahk ,

Or how delicious they are.

HumongousChungus ,

attempting to cure microvasculature damage caused by repeat COVID leads to a bigger-dick pill

HumongousChungus ,

this is the only outcome of the research

Mothra ,
@Mothra@mander.xyz avatar

I second the lemmy saying there is a considerable gap between discovery and implementation.

But to answer your question, I believe we are due some major breakthrough regarding psilocybin and other psychedelic substances which have been banned since the 60s. Research is well underway and with our current technology + knowledge in neuroscience we’re due to catch up quickly, unless everything gets tangled in too much red tape.

Improvement in mental health has a pretty immediately impact in our lives after all.

Diplomjodler3 ,

Everybody is going to groan, but solid state batteries. That would be a huge sea change, not just for cars, but also air travel.

voracitude ,

I have good news for you, then. We’re now past the “discovery” phase and we’re at the implementation phase with solid state batteries, as you can actually buy production models: yoshinopower.com

ImWaitingForRetcons ,

Honestly? A major breakthrough in fusion, or to a lesser extent, any other clean energy. We’ve decarbonised a decent chunk of the world’s energy profile, but there’s a strong financial incentive that politicians are vulnerable to protecting oil and gas, slowing down further decarbonisation. Batteries and supercapacitors also could do the trick.

tyo_ukko ,

I don’t think fusion would be as useful a technology as it would have been a few decades ago. Now renewables (wind, solar, hydro) seem like more and more as the clean and cheap energy of the future. The biggest problem of storage is rapidly being solved with batteries springing up everywhere.

The real problem with fusion is that even if it worked, the plants would be very complex and expensive. It would be much cheaper and reliable to build solar, wind and batteries instead.

Having operational fusion reactors would be cool as hell, but it wouldn’t have that much impact on our lives in the end.

Uli ,

Respectfully, I disagree. We’ve entered an AI boom, and right now, the star of the show is in a bit of a gangly awkward teenage phase. But already, these large data models are eating up mountains of energy. We’ll certainly make the technology more energy efficient, but we’re also going to rely on it more and more as it gets better. Any efficiency gains will be eaten up by AI models many times more complex and numerous than what we have now.

As climate change warms the globe, we’re all going to be running our air conditioning more, and nowhere will that be more true than the server centers where we centralize AI. To combat climate change, we may figure out ways of stripping carbon from the air and this will require energy too.

Solar is good. It’s meeting much of our need. Wind and hydroelectric fill gaps when solar isn’t enough. We have some battery infrastructure for night time and we’ll get better at that too. But there will come a point where we reach saturation of available land space.

If we can supplement our energy supply with a technology that requires a relatively small footprint (when it comes to powering a Metropolitan area), can theoretically produce a ton of power, requires resources that are plentiful on Earth like deuterium, and doesn’t produce a toxic byproduct, I think we should do everything in our power to make this technology feasible. But I can certainly agree that we should try to get our needs completely met with other renewables in the meantime.

emergencyfood ,

If we have a lot of cheap energy, we might be able to do industrial-scale carbon capture.

Ziggurat ,

A big difficulty is that between the scientific discover, and the application years or even decades can occur. Look at how supra conductor have been known for 100 years and still have very few real life usage.

My thoughts tough

  • Life on Mars. I don’t talk about Martian, but if we find remain of bacteria it would be a major breakthrough in biology

-physics beyond the standard model at LHC, no impacts for commoner, but would really help physics to understand our universe

More on technology/applied science

  • Next generation cures against cancer with high efficiency/specificity. I think about targeted alpha therapy and immunotherapy. If these get real, a cancer isn’t 6-12 month of painful treatment for followed by a year of recovery, but something a single injection can cure.
  • Male birth control, would give men a better control of their own fertility and give one more option to couple where the woman can’t use birth control
  • high temperature supra conductors, by high temperature I mean anything above 100K in normal pressure, high current, high magnetic field. Would allow to use way more super conducting magnet than today. Imagine a world where quenching a MRI doesn’t turn off the machine for 3 months.
JimmyBigSausage ,

I agree, but MAGA might have other plans? Lost lots of sleep about this overnight. Science is doomed.

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