BrianW
Shawn
BrianW
BrianW
There's also https://lppfusion.com/ . — Posty McPostface
BrianW
Metaphysician Undercover
How about the self-sustaining hydro-electric power plant? Think it's possible? — BrianW
BrianW
Metaphysician Undercover
BC
Michael Ossipoff
Michael Ossipoff
BrianW
Michael Ossipoff
Michael Ossipoff
Michael Ossipoff
Michael Ossipoff
Michael Ossipoff
BrianW
Pierre-Normand
You've lost me a little. I'm not implying the use of plants or plant material, it doesn't have to be cellulose or organic. I mean to imitate the capillary action in plants by constructing industrial grade (metallic or some high strength synthetic fibre) capillarity tubes. — BrianW
Pierre-Normand
Now you roll the old cylinder out of the way and stand up a new one, which doesn't weigh anything to speak of yet...
It would still violate conservation-of-energy, and therefore it would still be impossible.
But now it isn't quite as obvious why it wouldn't work. — Michael Ossipoff
BrianW
Pierre-Normand
Suppose I infuse a needle-like intrusion to break the water's surface tension to prevent its meniscus from settling on that level of the groove and to direct water out of the tube as well? (Bear with me, I'm trying to see if I can cook a solution to these possible limitations.) — BrianW
BrianW
The grooves will not drain the water down to below the level where the grooves begin. — Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand
Suppose I infuse a needle-like intrusion to break the water's surface tension to prevent its meniscus from settling on that level of the groove and to direct water out of the tube as well? (Bear with me, I'm trying to see if I can cook a solution to these possible limitations.) — BrianW
Metaphysician Undercover
Very tall trees, sequoia or redwood, manage to lift a lot of water from their roots into their canopy. You might investigate how they do that. (It's capillary action, of course. Could one duplicate the area of a sequoia's surface, under its bark, devoted to upward bound capillary action?
A piece of information from Wikipedia
"The water pressure decreases as it rises up the tree. This is because the capillary action is fighting the weight of the water. ... Scientists have found that the pressure inside the xylem decreases with the height of the tree, and similarly, the size of the redwood leaves decreases with the decrease in pressure. May 6, 2004" — Bitter Crank
Michael Ossipoff
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