Not sure about the physics but absolute zero is not easy to achieve. The vibration of. C12 I think is used in an atomic clock. I've always wondered if absolute zero is achieved and all motion of an atom ceases, then time would stand still in such an adiabatic system, yes?
Started looking into Army R&D after this and came across the history and genealogy of the Army Research Lab. Goes through 1800's to now lots to dig into.
A couple of weeks ago, I pulled out a drive from the late 90s and hooked it up to my computer. Every single bit was safe and sound. Of course, that not my only backup copy. Just one of the oldest.
Not sure about the physics but absolute zero is not easy to achieve. The vibration of. C12 I think is used in an atomic clock. I've always wondered if absolute zero is achieved and all motion of an atom ceases, then time would stand still in such an adiabatic system, yes?
No.
https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/183596/does-time-freeze-at-absolute-zero
The article below on page 93 says that they laser cool strontium monoflouride.
Started looking into Army R&D after this and came across the history and genealogy of the Army Research Lab. Goes through 1800's to now lots to dig into.
https://www.arl.army.mil/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/History-of-the-U.S.-Army-Research-Laboratory.pdf
https://www.arl.army.mil/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/ARL-P-360-2-The-Genealogy-of-ARL.pdf
I called it years ago. Always knew you can write data on atomic matter. (Though my idea is using free-floating electrons)
u/#emopepescroll
I use bits of rust to store my data.
A couple of weeks ago, I pulled out a drive from the late 90s and hooked it up to my computer. Every single bit was safe and sound. Of course, that not my only backup copy. Just one of the oldest.