Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "LK-99" in Malay language version.
published on the pre-print server arxiv.org and still has to go through peer review
What about that levitation video? Dr Sven Friedemann, associate professor at the University of Bristol's School of Physics, told i that it, and other data in the paper, "could stem from other phenomena". Graphene, … "is also diamagnetic [displaying repulsion like a superconductor] and can produce weak levitation". The video, in other words, could have a non-superconductor explanation.
LK-99; … Applicant: Quantum Energy Research Centre (Q-Centre); … Status: Awaiting Examination
working on superconducting materials again, and finally, succeeded in synthesizing a room temperature and atmospheric pressure superconductor (RTAP-SC) … named LK99 (first discovered as a trace by Dr. Lee and Dr. Kim in 1999).
Speaking to New Scientist, Hyun-Tak Kim at the College of William & Mary in Virginia says he will support anyone trying to replicate his team's work. … [HT] Kim has only co-authored one of the arXiv papers, while the other is authored by his colleagues at the Quantum Energy Research Centre in South Korea, … Both papers present similar measurements, however Kim says that the second paper contains "many defects" and was uploaded to arXiv without his permission. In that paper, the work is described as opening a "new era for humankind" … Once the findings are published in a peer-reviewed journal, which [HT] Kim says is in the works, he will support anyone who wants to create and test LK-99 for themselves. In the meantime, he and his colleagues will continue to work on perfecting their samples of the alleged miracle superconductor and move towards mass-producing it.
published on the pre-print server arxiv.org and still has to go through peer review
LK-99; … Applicant: Quantum Energy Research Centre (Q-Centre); … Status: Awaiting Examination
Speaking to New Scientist, Hyun-Tak Kim at the College of William & Mary in Virginia says he will support anyone trying to replicate his team's work. … [HT] Kim has only co-authored one of the arXiv papers, while the other is authored by his colleagues at the Quantum Energy Research Centre in South Korea, … Both papers present similar measurements, however Kim says that the second paper contains "many defects" and was uploaded to arXiv without his permission. In that paper, the work is described as opening a "new era for humankind" … Once the findings are published in a peer-reviewed journal, which [HT] Kim says is in the works, he will support anyone who wants to create and test LK-99 for themselves. In the meantime, he and his colleagues will continue to work on perfecting their samples of the alleged miracle superconductor and move towards mass-producing it.
What about that levitation video? Dr Sven Friedemann, associate professor at the University of Bristol's School of Physics, told i that it, and other data in the paper, "could stem from other phenomena". Graphene, … "is also diamagnetic [displaying repulsion like a superconductor] and can produce weak levitation". The video, in other words, could have a non-superconductor explanation.