A Brighter Future
2:41
3 ай бұрын
2023 Sandia Intern Symposium
2:24
2023 Sandia Intern Career Fair
1:35
R&D 100 Entry 2023: Stitch-IO
3:53
Пікірлер
@gkw9882
@gkw9882 Күн бұрын
I wonder what that costs, per test.
@jeremyrobbins9064
@jeremyrobbins9064 2 күн бұрын
1:30
@dougalachi
@dougalachi 3 күн бұрын
If you dont understand and accept why Russia is developing new delivery systems after you've watched this video, you are not ignorant, you are an idiot.
@rickbullock4331
@rickbullock4331 4 күн бұрын
This is just a subtle warning to any adversary that may be thinking about starting something,just saying.🤔🙄😳😲🤗
@colinstewart1432
@colinstewart1432 5 күн бұрын
Great film but the narrator's voice is an unbearable affectation.
@FollowTheFreeman
@FollowTheFreeman 5 күн бұрын
This type of stuff should be what plays on the news networks. Imagine an entire country being aware of the moves we are making for the future.
@geraldmoore4001
@geraldmoore4001 7 күн бұрын
awesome stuff!
@patrickshockley3483
@patrickshockley3483 9 күн бұрын
Is there a list of all the documents and books mentioned in this series?
@WalterBurton
@WalterBurton 11 күн бұрын
👍👍👍
@androidtyphoo9161
@androidtyphoo9161 12 күн бұрын
I need to rent this for my mother-in-laws birthday.
@xx-pb3bj
@xx-pb3bj 12 күн бұрын
yeeeehaa!
@AdricM
@AdricM 12 күн бұрын
very cool.. literally.
@jeffreywhite2272
@jeffreywhite2272 12 күн бұрын
👍👍👍👍👍 👌
@ThePrimaFacie
@ThePrimaFacie 13 күн бұрын
Now all thats left is testing in space and the moon. I guess the Moon would be "easy" cause just do it in a vacuum and take away 5/6th gravity? Right? But near zero G might be cooler (pun intended). If it hasn't been done in a wile. Cool thanks for the vid and great vistas. Oh and the safety part too, I guess.
@s3tthunderbolt99
@s3tthunderbolt99 13 күн бұрын
Thanks guys.
@phlogistanjones2722
@phlogistanjones2722 13 күн бұрын
The regulations books are written in blood. More useful data is always a grand goal and I trust it will lead to better understanding of system requirements and expectations. The idea that "pure" forms of hydrogen is going to be a meaningful energy transport mechanism outside of "cooking gas" or rocketry may be considered a noble thing but it is not in the least realistic. Peaceful Skies.
@peraltarockets
@peraltarockets 13 күн бұрын
Here in Oakland, we all ride in fuel cell powered busses every day.
@dwightshelby
@dwightshelby 13 күн бұрын
Being a retired code official, and an ISO inspector, this type of research and testing is of great importance. Hats off to all y'all who work to improve our world.
@ZIGZAGBureauofInvestigation
@ZIGZAGBureauofInvestigation 13 күн бұрын
International GAZA Holocaust Remembrance Day is NOW
@WeebRemover4500
@WeebRemover4500 19 күн бұрын
it went as planned? it literally broke!
@peterkorek-mv6rs
@peterkorek-mv6rs 19 күн бұрын
The REALLY fast and furious
@jamesjohnson1710
@jamesjohnson1710 23 күн бұрын
Verywell done,But i wonder if anyone is listening with all the worlds armed forces preparing for war thanks Russia,korea and the Islamic sebre rattlers 😢😢😢
@MrCrystalcranium
@MrCrystalcranium 23 күн бұрын
The great moralizing that went on regarding megaton range weaponry was very misplaced. The great minds involved, including Oppenheimer, David Lilienthal and others, were so horrified at the prospect of building bombs of unimaginable power and destructive capability that they saw no practical use for a weapon of 10, 20 or 50 megatons in yield. They got caught up in "Why should we build a weapon of such destructive force, that it's use would only mean the mass killing of millions of civilians?" They lost sight, or didn't realize yet, that it wasn't about building bombs as big as you could design...it was about building bombs that were good enough as physically small as you could. Thermonuclear weapon development was more about deliverability than it was about ramping up the megatonnage as far as possible. If anyone had told Oppenheimer in 1950 that in 20 years, the Soviets would have thousands of 300-450 kiloton thermonuclear weapons the size of 55 gallon oil drums on the tips of thousands of missiles, he might have been less sanguine about his moral dilemma regarding the hydrogen bomb breakthrough.
@Nighthawke70
@Nighthawke70 24 күн бұрын
And what Sandia didn't know was what Lockheed's legendary Skunk Works had cooked up in the 60's and 70's: Stealth. It smoked the USSR's defense systems, giving NATO a genuine First Strike capability. Combine that with the ALCM, Trident and MX threat, the Sov had little choice but to fold. Enter the late 80's and 90's, the world flipped upside down and inside out.
@cornelisvanderbent8569
@cornelisvanderbent8569 27 күн бұрын
Doing rocket science yet wearing mouth masks?
@cocogao376
@cocogao376 28 күн бұрын
Soooo, they mentioned all the nations having nuclear weapons but Isreal ? what do u mean by "8 have modernized their nuclear forces for the 21st century blablabla Except US........" it is definitely a great documentary for Americans. However, it's biased.
@FreddFlores
@FreddFlores 28 күн бұрын
Disrespect it
@yakut9876
@yakut9876 Ай бұрын
It is very complicated. I do not support the idea of ​​using electricity, as it is very consumable and requires special types of fluids, in addition to being polluted and not similar to how our bodies work.
@TopSpeedJussi
@TopSpeedJussi Ай бұрын
Kimmo Soramäki and Hannu Napari have been involved in espionage. Fallout shelters in Helsinki have been specced out so Finland with psychotic president can provoke and ride the storm. Airport has been designed to hijack a tanker and bombers during high defense condition. I sent my report to Amazing Randi.
@TOMMY-WANT-WINGY
@TOMMY-WANT-WINGY Ай бұрын
4 Nike rocket motors?
@jeremytheimer7443
@jeremytheimer7443 Ай бұрын
It's amazong how the sled is moving so fast that when it hits the suspended target the cables don't even move as the target gets destroyed.
@SisavatManthong-yb1yn
@SisavatManthong-yb1yn Ай бұрын
Mvz should be at end of years 2024? 😆 It's nice to know
@3dsquare
@3dsquare Ай бұрын
cool tech always love Sandia labs
@NvTwist
@NvTwist Ай бұрын
I would have or rather preferred the control (buttons) be controlled via the tigger finger. A small hat placed below magazine ejection button. In-between target accusations tigger finger is free and no need to reach forward while weapons is placed on a support.
@patrickdunning9820
@patrickdunning9820 Ай бұрын
Bonkers, Patch. London, UK
@joshjones3408
@joshjones3408 Ай бұрын
Just like the cell phone.... every body just had to have one ....the what ..my iPhone is big an better then your android..a um who's fishing pole is bigger kinda thing....👍👍👍👌👌
@joshjones3408
@joshjones3408 Ай бұрын
Great video 👍👍👍
@claudevieaul1465
@claudevieaul1465 Ай бұрын
Yeah, I feel a lot safer now...
@whirledpeas3477
@whirledpeas3477 Ай бұрын
Never got the nuclear holocaust we were promised
@kening95
@kening95 Ай бұрын
You have to fight the war with what equipment you have, hench, a slingshot.
@Indrid__Cold
@Indrid__Cold Ай бұрын
Nuclear weapons have played a crucial role in maintaining peace among major powers for the past seven decades. To ensure their continued effectiveness as a deterrent, it is essential to convey to the international community that the repercussions of attacking the United States would be so severe and catastrophic that even an unpredictable individual like Vladimir Putin would refrain from such an action against the US or its allies. The most effective way to achieve this international understanding is by guaranteeing that our nuclear arsenal remains robust, adaptable, and, most importantly, dependable. This is the primary objective behind the necessary investments to modernize our nuclear arsenal and bring it into the 21st century.
@lorentzinvariant7348
@lorentzinvariant7348 Ай бұрын
I once was completely on the other side but as I have grown older and accumulated life experience, I have come to believe Edward Teller was right all along.
@Gitika1956
@Gitika1956 Ай бұрын
Fake! 🥳
@SirTortoise
@SirTortoise Ай бұрын
April FOOLS LOLOLOL
@winningjubbly9712
@winningjubbly9712 Ай бұрын
Would it hurt me if I stuck my head in the middle when it switches on, or would I just get a tan, the worlds most expensive sunbed?
@winningjubbly9712
@winningjubbly9712 Ай бұрын
I remember Brian Cox doing a documentary about this machine. He was stood in the test control room (the whole chamber has to be evacuated when it activates) when it's turned on. When it pulsed he said the whole ground lifted up several inches as it swelled with raw power. And that was in the shielded control room!
@winningjubbly9712
@winningjubbly9712 Ай бұрын
Now, I'm sorry but that's disgusting. What did that bit of shrubbery ever do to deserve that? There it is, minding its own business, then BOSH! someone grabs it by its roots and the next thing it knows, it's hanging there about to be seriously abused by humans. And that's just not on!
@patrickterry779
@patrickterry779 Ай бұрын
This was operational back in the 80s when I was stationed at Kirtland AFB. It appears to be disassembled now, some of the tower remains.
@mikeholmstrom1899
@mikeholmstrom1899 Ай бұрын
The AIR-2 Genie missile did not have a PAL device. One of my concerns of a remote controlled PAL is if there's a break in the chain of control, how can a retaliation strike be conducted? I also see from the WIki on PAL that China & Pakistan may not have PAL installed on their nuclear weapons. Related to the lack of PAL could be a scenario like in "By Dawn's Early Light", where just a single rogue nuclear strike cascades in alternating, larger retaliatory strikes.
@shayaakerman9438
@shayaakerman9438 Ай бұрын
Hi need to watch this a politics assignment, any way I can get a transcript for the documentary, lol😂? I'm not joking
@Shaker626
@Shaker626 Ай бұрын
You're telling me I can meet cute physicists that share an interest in nuclear weapons design? Where do I get my clearances?