program for the weapon, they went through the periodic table to find out what elements could possibly be used to create the energy. Uh, and they chose uranium because the byproduct was
- Concept
- periodic table
- Score
- 4 · causes · because
- Status
- candidate — not yet promoted to canon
Corpus evidence — top 10 passages
Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).
- 01 · _intake0.759
Physicists used E=mc2 to build the CERN collider and many other particle accelerators to understand the nuclear reactions in quantum physics. They built machines capable of aiming high energy protons into a target. This alone is capable of creating matter out of the energy they put into the machine in a controlled fashion. The matter they created were particles that they used to construct the theory called the Standard Model of physics. Every particle known to date in the Standard Model theory has been found using this detection system. The identity of these particles also required a lot of co…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/time-7-photoelectric-effect.md
- 02 · yt0.758
There's a a guy in Florida, and this is again a story of time, just so we're clear. It's a guy in Florida that found a nuclear weapon that fell off the coast of Florida. He rigged up um a way to harness the energy from the nuclear weapon and deliver it to his house so he didn't have to pay an electric bill for almost 27 years. Now, the the people in Florida found this out and they arrested him. But why am I telling you this story? Not because the guy was fighting the paradigm. The amount of power that's present that you can harness from atoms is astounding. Remember, in a nuclear system that's…
yt/Omug2kdB8VM-dr-jack-kruse-on-the-biological-implications-of-time-cancer-/transcript.txt
- 03 · yt0.753
Okay, now let's go to the fourth metal since I'm going through this process for you. Malibdinum. That's a metal that not too many people know about. But people who really read my work from 15 or 20 years ago will look back on the jackruz.com site and find this really interesting blog post that talked about something peculiar about the mitochondria that in mammals. Remember now we're talking postcambrian. We're talking way far down the path. When did mammals come? Just so everybody's clear. 280 million years ago. Even when the dinosaurs were here, but they were little. And now we're the end res…
yt/tg9c6shuazI-dr-jack-kruse-on-how-light-controls-metabolism-diabetes-blue/transcript.txt
- 04 · yt0.749
I'm Luke Storey. For the past 22 years, I've been relentlessly committed to my deepest passion, designing the ultimate lifestyle based on the most powerful principles of spirituality, health, psychology, and personal development. The Lifestyle is podcast is a show dedicated to sharing my discoveries and the experts behind them with you. Here we go again, Robert Slovak deep dive. Deep dive. Oh man, I'm so glad we get to have this conversation. So let's just dive right in. For those that don't know, Robert was on a previous episode also recorded here at lovely quick small in Mexico where we talk…
yt/wCEztiKMXx0-badass-biohacks-deuterium-depleted-water-molecular-hydrogen-/transcript.txt
- 05 · blog0.747
They chose to order elements by atomic number because of the growing recognition that electronic structure was the atomic feature responsible for governing how atoms combine and the number of electrons is governed by the requirement of overall electrical neutrality (Kragh 2000). 1.4 Complications for the Periodic System Mendeleev’s periodic system was briefly called into question with the discovery of the inert gas argon in 1894, which had to be placed outside the existing system after chlorine. But William Ramsay (1852–1916) suspected there might be a whole group of chemically inert substance…
blog/plato-stanford-edu/philosophy-of-chemistry.md
- 06 · yt0.746
Okay, for those of you who are pulling out the periodic table right now, the chemical symbols are Fe, Cu, MN, and M O. Okay, they all do different things, but it turns out sunlight quantizes melanin to absorb these metals in a very specific fashion. And remember back in the GOE, what do we know from Nick Lane's work and Bill Miller's work that life bacteria and archae at this time 3.8 billion years ago is simple because it only can use glycolysis. We call that today war metabolism. Okay, there's no TCA cycle yet. There's no ura cycle. Do you know why? Because belanin has to do its job cleaning…
yt/tg9c6shuazI-dr-jack-kruse-on-how-light-controls-metabolism-diabetes-blue/transcript.txt
- 07 · yt0.745
And barium is a little more than half as heavy as uranium. This was the clue, and Otto Frisch in Copenhagen and Lise Meitner in Stockholm seized on the clue. They said, "What is happening is that the uranium nucleus is coming apart. The fragments are not just half and half, but slightly unsymmetric and sometimes one of them is barium." Bohr brought this news to the United States and it caused quite a stir. And very soon in Copenhagen, Columbia, in Berkeley, one actually saw the very energetic halves of the uranium nucleus saw their energy and identified them and knew that fission was a reality…
yt/5-Lkhzn9Leo-j-robert-oppenheimer-discusses-the-life-of-nobel-laureate-ni/transcript.txt
- 08 · _intake0.740
They looked first at the trace elements in bone. Copper, lead, silver, and beryllium were all known to bond to the bone then. Beryllium miners had a high rate of osteogenic sarcoma, a deadly bone cancer because beryllium removed the normal cell control of the p53 gene. This unleashed the osteocytes growth potential to cause cancer. Strontium 90 did the same by strongly binding to bone and slowly releasing its ionizing radiation into the bone. They knew some ion was incorporated into the bone to change its electrical properties to convert the bone light to an electromechanical signal in the per…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/emf-8-quantum-bone.md
- 09 · _intake0.739
The puzzling thing to me in his discriptions, was that in his model **never required large amounts of ATP** to get the job done thermodynamically, but it did required a DC current to maintain order of the biologic process. This current was delivered from the periosteum and from the nerves that innervated the area. He showed that this DC current would make protein that makes bone up, collagen, would line up correctly once it was hydrated with a current passed into it, and its secondary and tertiary chemical structures would appear before it could be mineralized by hydroxyapatite. These were the…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/emf-7-quantum-prometheus.md
- 10 · yt0.738
Uh, the first is that the probability of the reaction corresponded to thousands and in later examples tens of billions of times the area of the nucleus and that is a typical wave effect due to the fact that neutron too has a wave nature and can be absorbed over areas that correspond to the square of its wavelength. But the other feature that was not quite expected is that different nuclei had had well-defined energies at very sharp energy regions, very narrow energy regions, at which such capture took place. Well, Bohr didn't have to look this up in a book, and he knew that if you have a well-…
yt/5-Lkhzn9Leo-j-robert-oppenheimer-discusses-the-life-of-nobel-laureate-ni/transcript.txt
Curation checklist
- ☐ Verify excerpt against source recording
- ☐ Tag tier (axiom · law · principle · primary derivation · observation)
- ☐ Cross-cite to ≥1 primary source (PubMed / arXiv / archive.org)
- ☐ Promote to
bucket-canon/03-chemistry/