So I was watching TV and I saw a commercial for flexon glasses that consisted of metal that you could twist & bend but would retain its original shape. I was like "that is f****** cool!"
Then I thought...didn't I see & hear something about metal that could be bent & twisted but retain its original shape during a Roswell documentary...
It makes my mind wonder...
Alleged leaked information about fantastic science-fiction-like metals from 1947 recently become science fact 60 years later...after being developed by the military. Riiiiiiiight.
It is either a coincidence, the unfounded conspiracy theories insprired actual research by the military or some the stories are true...
Which one seems more likely?
Then I thought...didn't I see & hear something about metal that could be bent & twisted but retain its original shape during a Roswell documentary...
It makes my mind wonder...
Alleged leaked information about fantastic science-fiction-like metals from 1947 recently become science fact 60 years later...after being developed by the military. Riiiiiiiight.
It is either a coincidence, the unfounded conspiracy theories insprired actual research by the military or some the stories are true...
Which one seems more likely?
http://www.ufos-aliens.co.uk/morphingmetals.htmlWe were staggered at the remarks on Langleys AFB website made by Anna McGowan, program manager for the Morphing Project at NASA's Langley Research Center (which is a part of this project, but not the main company).
She says:
"Among the exotic "smart" materials being developed by the Morphing Project, shape-memory alloys are relatively ordinary. Imagine seeing a bullet shot through a sheet of material, only to have the material instantly "heal" behind the bullet! Remember, this is not science fiction. Self-healing materials actually exist, and LaRC scientists are working to unravel their secrets.
"What we did at NASA-Langley was basically dissect that material to answer the question, 'how does it do that?'" McGowan said. "By doing so, we can actually get down to computational modeling of these materials at the molecular level. Once we understand the material's behavior at that level, then we can create designer 'smart' materials," The above statement seems odd to us. Why would you strip down technology to see how it works if you had built it in the first place? Or does this mean that NASA-Langley did not make the material, but are in fact back-engineering it?