Chapter 1442: Chapter 683: Experimental Accident! Ultra-Mini Hydrogen Bomb Explosion!_2
Every year, many mathematicians publish new processes, but the achievements in pure mathematics are relatively few in quantity, and most come from those "easier to produce results" areas.
For example, the research of partial differential equations.
Many mathematicians spend their entire lives studying partial differential equations.
Zhou Li was one of them.
This field could have many results; the solution to a particular nonlinear partial differential equation would become a decent achievement.
The field of analytic number theory is the most renowned but the hardest to yield results in.
Several world-leading mathematical conjectures, including the Goldbach Conjecture, Fermat’s Last Theorem, the Twin Prime Conjecture, and so on, all come from the field of analytic number theory. fɾeeweɓnѳveɭ.com
The current research in analytic number theory, or progress in the field of prime numbers, would surely be highly influential achievements.
A few people were getting excited.
——
When Zhao Yi left that day, it was already very late. He had wanted to sleep in the next day, but he had to get up despite this.
Because there was news from the Z-wave experiment group.
They found a manufacturer that specialized in producing stoves and directly purchased three vacuum furnaces.
These vacuum furnaces could create a vacuum environment of one and a half cubic meters.
Although it was only one and a half cubic meters, a bit far from the desired four cubic meters, they could stack three furnaces together. The experiment group came to ask if it was feasible to proceed with the experiment using this method.
Zhao Yi thought it over carefully and saw no issue; the experiment was not about whether the Z-wave could be transferred but about the problems of particle transportation.
He went to the experiment base.
The experimental base had begun preparations. Having the means to create a vacuum was only the foundation; they needed to install many devices around it and also plan the entire experimental process.
Zhao Yi took part in the experimental preparation process. He guided how the experiment should be conducted and made specific demands for the testing equipment.
Since it was just a small-scale Z-wave trial, they didn’t need to accumulate a lot of electrical energy, so the experimental preparations didn’t take long.
After the preparations were completed on the same day, the experiment was scheduled for the next morning. However, when the next morning arrived, the experiment base had visitors.
Perhaps calling them visitors was not fitting; they were people who were to join the Z-wave group.
A total of more than a dozen people came, all from the Special Physics Technology Research Institute, led by a female physicist named Yan Rong.
Yan Rong, at the age of 61, was also a physicist academician of the Science Academy.
Yan Rong led the team this time to have everyone join the Z-wave group as part of the "Spatial Transmission Influence" research project.
This research project had just started, and Yan Rong’s team was the first batch to join.
The "Spatial Transmission Influence" research project is very large. The first few batches of participants would be involved in the construction work related to the research, not directly in the research itself, because without extensive construction and preparation, it would be impossible to conduct related research. ƒree𝑤ebnσvel.com
This was somewhat like the particle collider project.
For a particle collider project, obviously, you need to see the particle collider first, then you can proceed with a series of experiments.
The "Spatial Transmission Influence" research project was the same; they needed to build relevant facilities and apparatuses, including a large-scale Z-wave generator and related power supply facilities, etc.
In a specific location in the west, large power plants were already under construction, and as the "Spatial Transmission Influence" project unfolded, a town would inevitably develop in the surrounding area.
Yan Rong had hurried over. They had planned to arrive in the afternoon, but as soon as they heard that Zhao Yi was at the experiment group, they immediately changed their plans and came over in the early morning.
Zhao Yi knew the reason for Yan Rong’s team’s arrival, so he spoke to her about the experiment that was about to be conducted, "It’s just right, we are going to conduct an important experiment on whether Z-wave compression of space will affect spatial connection transmission."
Yan Rong immediately took interest upon hearing this, "I seem to have heard about this study, are there any results?"
Ruan Wenye said somewhat regretfully, "We’ve already conducted the experiment several times, with no findings. Hopefully we will discover something today. This time we are better prepared, and we even have a vacuum furnace."
"Team leader Ruan, please explain in detail."
Ruan Wenye then elaborated on the purpose and preparation of the experiment.
Yan Rong asked, "Will there be results today? What do you think, Academician Zhao?"
Zhao Yi replied, "I believe there should be results. Theoretically speaking, the compression of space by Z-wave will definitely affect spatial transmission."
"These effects could be multifaceted, such as the Z-wave being transported, similar to an energy-gathering satellite transferring light energy. However, due to many items influencing our experiment today, we can’t verify that."
"It might also affect energy transmission, for example, causing more energy to be transported, or it might even lead to material transportation."
"Material transportation?" Yan Rong immediately seized on the key point.
Zhao Yi responded, "It’s just a possibility, which is why we’re using the vacuum furnace to test it."
Yan Rong didn’t show much concern after hearing this, mainly because material transportation seemed too sci-fi, something unfathomable.
Ruan Wenye also didn’t pay much attention; he even thought there would be no results, as they had already conducted several experiments, and he found it very hard to believe in something like material transportation.