
Article was dated 2012?
Also doesn't that violate some law about entropy must increase?
The LED was placed electrically in series with an unheated resistor
It was actually built by the Ioffe Physico-Technical Institute in St. Petersburg.

Since the photodetector remained unheated (~ 25*C), even without bias the LED’s 135*C active region emits approximately 40 nW of blackbody radiation in this wavelength range; the lock-in technique was necessary to separate the 69 pW of electrically driven optical power from the portion of that blackbody background which was incident on the detector surface.
Article was dated 2012?
Also doesn't that violate some law about entropy must increase?
I would think so. Drawing energy from the sorroundings certainly rings some alarm bells for me.
Article was dated 2012?
Also doesn't that violate some law about entropy must increase?
I would think so. Drawing energy from the sorroundings certainly rings some alarm bells for me.
Drawing energy from the surroundings is mundane. Heat pumps and Peltier coolers do it all the time. A process cannot be said to violate physical laws unless you do the correct thermodynamic analysis using the appropriate equations with the right data and reach an educated conclusion.
Also doesn't that violate some law about entropy must increase?
Drawing energy from the surroundings is mundane. Heat pumps and Peltier coolers do it all the time.
There are plenty of chemical processes where the entropy of the SYSTEM decreases.
Is the MIT people riding the verge after all?

We have discussed about this many times. the key is to have an open mind - at any given point, science is wrong in the sense that sooner or later someone will find a better way to explain the world around us.
Is over unity efficiency possible? Sure.
Is faster than light possible? Ask a physist about transmission speed of quantum entanglement,
...
Keep an open mind and don't rule out things just because it is not compatible with today's "scientific understanding".
Is faster than light possible? Ask a physist about transmission speed of quantum entanglement,
We have discussed about this many times. the key is to have an open mind - at any given point, science is wrong in the sense that sooner or later someone will find a better way to explain the world around us.
It is considered true because of practical observation - millions of experiments have shown it to be true.
Each time someone tries to create another overunity machine and fails, it adds another data point to the already large pile in favor of the law of conservation of energy.
The same with Newtonian and Einstein physics - they are all observed to be true until they are shown to be untrue.
The same with Newtonian and Einstein physics - they are all observed to be true until they are shown to be untrue.
Uh oh, someone forgot to tell that to the civil and mechanical engineers, architects, weapons builders, aerospace engineers, nuclear engineers, etc....
The same with Newtonian and Einstein physics - they are all observed to be true until they are shown to be untrue.
Uh oh, someone forgot to tell that to the civil and mechanical engineers, architects, weapons builders, aerospace engineers, nuclear engineers, etc....
And that's fine since engineering is all about tolerances and approximations, based on science (maybe since engineering predates science) but not science, just the practical application of science.
QuoteIs the MIT people riding the verge after all?- at any given point, science is wrong in the sense that sooner or later someone will find a better way to explain the world around us.
Is over unity efficiency possible? Sure.
Keep an open mind and don't rule out things just because it is not compatible with today's "scientific understanding".