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Most metals and minerals will soon be able for artificial production
I could be wrong, but I don't think metals can be replicated, only mined.
Since they're already at the basic elemental level.....
Who knows what new alloys could be achieved through experimentation, though.
Who knows what alloys have been created but aren't available to the public?
Alloys are not elements.
I didn't say they were.
"I could be wrong, but I don't think metals can be replicated, only mined."
For additional context, alloys are a mix of two or more metals or elements.
Who knows what could be possible beneath the surface using artificial substances in creation of new alloys? Moreover, who knows how efficient such a process could become if you could use, say, a quarter of the metal content in an alloy with other substances?
There are new alloys discovered or created somewhat infrequently even today, so even with full metal alloys there is a lot to be discovered.
There are also alloys of thermoplastics.
Then there are potentials for composites.
The sky's the limit.
This. Who knows all the amazing things they are hiding.
I was promised flying cars from back to the future. I want my skyway lol
Have you ever heard of a nanofabricator? Just started learning about them yesterday. A nanofab is essentially a 3d printer that allows you to design a project on the atomic level. The result is perfect precision after you had arranged the materials atomic structure to be 100% exact.
Even a supernova is not powerful enough to fuse elements to create heavy metals, you need a kilonova
As far as we know.
Gold and silver are common in the universe (I heard).. and even then, there is a lot left on Earth to mine and the technology to mine it keeps getting better.
It's strange to think that ordinary people had gold and silver in their pockets 100 years ago, that it was circulating currency.
If you have figured out Alchemy
I actually think I saw what random was talking about however the amount of energy used to convert to gold literally is more expensive than the gold.
What if the US Debt Clock is correct and Gold will be at $12k/oz at some point in 2025?
Is that even realistic?
Would that then make the conversion process worth it?