MIT

(1897, Lydia Johnson) The Black girl so Brilliant even Science could not explain her

Publié le Mis à jour le

Step into the terrifying world of 1897 Boston, where a 13-year-old Black girl’s extraordinary genius became her greatest curse. When Professor Harrison Webb discovered Lydia Johnson solving advanced mathematical equations that MIT’s best minds couldn’t crack, he unknowingly sealed her fate in ways more horrifying than any ghost story.

🕯️ What unspeakable horrors did this brilliant child endure in the name of « science »? When racial theorists discovered a Negro girl whose abilities shattered every lie they’d built their careers upon, they didn’t celebrate her genius — they conspired to destroy it. This true historical horror will make you question how many other brilliant minds were silenced, studied, and systematically erased from existence.

⚗️ From midnight kidnappings sanctioned by courts to secret medical facilities where children were held captive for « examination, » discover how America’s scientific establishment protected white supremacy at any cost. The systematic erasure of Lydia Johnson wasn’t just murder of a person — it was the murder of truth itself, buried so deep that it took over a century to uncover.

MIT cracked Nuclear fusion.. And it might have just doomed the Oil industry

Publié le Mis à jour le

In this video, we dive into the record-breaking fusion magnet developed by MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center — a discovery that could mark the beginning of the end for the global oil industry.

How MIT’s 20-tesla magnet breakthrough unlocks compact, affordable fusion energy Why SPARC could outperform mega-projects like ITER at a fraction of the size and cost The billions oil giants like Chevron and Eni are quietly investing into fusion startups How fusion could collapse fossil fuel markets and rewrite global energy demand The geopolitical and military implications of decentralized, limitless fusion power What ARC — the first real commercial fusion reactor — means for your future This isn’t science fiction. With private funding from Microsoft, breakthroughs in superconducting magnets, and SPARC aiming for net energy by 2027, the fusion timeline is accelerating fast.

Protégé : Massachussetts Institute of Technology – M.I.T Course (2019)

Publié le Mis à jour le

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DÉCOUVERTE – 100 ans après la prédiction d’Einstein, les ondes gravitationnelles ont été détectées

Publié le Mis à jour le

FAQ: Ondes gravitationnelles avec Dr. Lamberts

An interesting development by the LIGO team that made the discovery:

On September 14th, 2015, a ripple in the fabric of space, created by the violent collision of two distant black holes over a billion years ago, washed across the Earth. As it did, two laser-based detectors, 50 years in the making – one in Louisiana and the other in Washington State – momentarily twitched, confirming a century-old prediction by Albert Einstein and marking the opening of a new era in astronomy. Join some of the very scientists responsible for this most anticipated discovery of our age and see how gravitational waves will be used to explore the universe like never before.