Tuesday, December 30, 2008
What are the Jellyfish?
They are these large Zepplin-like heavy-lifting semi-Buckyball lighter-than-air, stronger-than-steel, honey-combed aero-gel superstructure, cargo-blimps.
They are white like the clouds and shaped like half a marshmallow, smooth spherically curved top, like the cap of a tooth, holding within it the lighter than air, non-flammable, buoyancy gas sacks. This cargo-blimp lifting structure sits like an open umbrella on the long cylindrical carbon sieves that hang beneath this autonomous buoy. They are covered with solar cells that power the carbon sieves.
Every so often, the blimps "poop" out a carbon brick- or pelt the landscape with a black hail of carbon pelts. Huge packs of them float through our atmosphere like jelly fish in the deep ocean. But these are bio-engineered with nano-technology to "harvest" carbon dioxide gas from the atmosphere at the highest efficiency possible. They are attracted in packs to locations of intense carbon emissions, their food; they hover above cities and forest fires, volcanoes and cattle feed lots, factory smoke stacks and oil refineries. They vary from the size of a Hot Air Balloon to the size of a Football Stadium.....
They are actually free-floating autonomous self-replicating carbon extractors that look something like a cross between the giant sub-orbital Long Duration Balloon (here), but made out a more rigid superstructure from carbon aero-gels (here) and (here). So the thing would have a smokey bluish translucence, (like jellyfish), but would also have a patterned sequined exterior surface from the mini photo-voltaic solar cell panels used to power the craft.
The thing is essentially a sophisticated robot, mimicked after real-world organic adaptations, but designed to extract carbon from the atmosphere. The quantity of them in the sky is comparable to the quantity of combustion engines on earth. When storms approach they automatically inflate and rise above bad weather, then descend and continue their carbon extraction activities from the atmosphere.
This idea came to me after view an image of the earth infected with a carbon producing virus:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XBwjQsOEeg
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Progress Dec.25

Thursday, December 18, 2008
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
progress Dec. 17 2008 (thoughts)
lifecycle:
egg
pupa
larvae
adult
tunnels or tubes with a rail in the center that transports. Acts as a blood vessel. Sending raw materials in and waste materials (C02) out.
power supply: wind turbines? solar panels. solar voltaic cells.
The project released its designs and control programs under the GNU GPL. Using the help of citizens home computers to calculate the data.
progress Dec. 17 2008 (references)
looking into aerogel. Found this website dealing with using people as free labor for science
http://stardustathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/
lifecycle:
egg
larva
pupa
adult
sources:
Extraction Of Carbon Dioxide From Atmosphere Seen Possible
http://www.futurepundit.com/archives/004648.html
Nanotech replicators to build solar photovoltaics panels
http://www.futurepundit.com/archives/003996.html
talks about self replicating machines possibility
self replicating machines:
A fundamental obstacle of self-replicating machines, how to repair the repair systems, was the critical failure in the automated society described in The Machine Stops.
Von Neumann
Berserkers The name is derived from a series of novels by Fred Saberhagen feature an ongoing war between humanity and such machinesCellular automaton:
Some living things use naturally occurring cellular automata in their functioning.
Patterns of some seashells, like the ones in Conus and Cymbiola genus, are generated by natural CA. The pigment cells reside in a narrow band along the shell's lip. Each cell secretes pigments according to the activating and inhibiting activity of its neighbour pigment cells, obeying a natural version of a mathematical rule.[citation needed] The cell band leaves the colored pattern on the shell as it grows slowly. For example, the widespread species Conus textile bears a pattern resembling the Rule 30 CA described above.
Conus textile photo link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Textile_cone.JPG#file
Stoma (medicine), an opening which connects a portion of the body cavity to the outside environment
Moore's artificial living plants
In 1956 mathematician Edward F. Moore proposed the first known suggestion for a practical real-world self-replicating machine, also published in Scientific American.[15][16] Moore's "artificial living plants" were proposed as machines able to use air, water and soil as sources of raw materials and to draw its energy from sunlight via a solar battery or a steam engine. He chose the seashore as an initial habitat for such machines, giving them easy access to the chemicals in seawater, and suggested that later generations of the machine could be designed to float freely on the ocean's surface as self-replicating factory barges or to be placed in barren desert terrain that was otherwise useless for industrial purposes. The self-replicators would be "harvested" for their component parts, to be used by humanity in other non-replicating machines.
Nanoscale Silica May Be Key To Hydrogen Storage
http://www.futurepundit.com/archives/cat_nanotech_for_energy_tech.html
nanophotonics
Fused Deposition Modelling FDM http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fused_deposition_modeling
RepRap is short for Replicating Rapid-prototyper.http://www.reprap.org/bin/view/Main/WebHome
