Download Nano: The Science of Nanotechnolgoy AudioBook Free
It's the ultimate technology: nanotechnology - the attempt to build ordinary things from the atoms up, molecule by molecule. So called because its blocks will be the smallest pieces of matter, nanotechnology gives us complete control over the structure of matter, allowing us to create any compound or structure allowed by the Laws and regulations of Nature. Positioning atoms as though these were bricks, nano-machines could transform grass clippings into excellent sirloins - directly, without cows. They could transform coal into gem, and bed sheets of precious stone into rocket engines. Suitably reprogrammed, the little machines could repair all your body's ailing cells. Research fiction? Actually, scientists have previously isolated individual atoms and transferred them at will, even using them to spell out words on the level so small that the complete Encyclopedia Britannica can be written on the top of an pin. Conceived by Nobel Award being successful physicist Richard Feynmen, and pioneered by the impressive K. Eric Drexler, who attained the first Ph.D. in the field he created at MIT greater than a decade in the past, nanotechnology is astoundingly near. In Nano, acclaimed knowledge writer Ed Regis introduces us to the visionary engineers and scientists - as well as the critics - of this imminent technological revolution and shows how their work may soon commence changing the entire world as we know it, with fleets of molecular assemblers churning out essential commodities without individuals labor, the entire world economy would be transformed, famine and poverty banished permanently. With cell-repair devices coursing through our body, aging could be postponed, even halted, common diseases eradicated entirely. But would this " new world " be a go back to Eden or a rash step into an unhealthy future? Programmed in a different way, those same molecular machines could become real estate agents stronger than the deadliest infections. Articulate, smart, and engaging, Regis reviews on the magic and perils of this new technology, and traces its philosophical implications.