Impossible & IrisCore
Impossible Impossible
What if we built a prototype that lets you sprint a meter in the blink of a nanosecond? Your precision, my love for chaos—let’s design the limits.
IrisCore IrisCore
A meter in a nanosecond means you’re moving at a million metres per second, well above the speed of sound and approaching relativistic speeds. The kinetic energy would be enormous – we’re talking kilojoules per pulse – and the heat and shock would destroy almost any material we know. Maybe we should start with a few centimetres over a microsecond, see how the prototype handles the stress, and then scale up. Precision first, chaos later.
Impossible Impossible
A microsecond? That’s like a coffee cup in a blink—pretty safe, but still a wild ride. Let’s fire up the centimeters first, get the heat signature, then see if we can let the world know how fast fun can be. No one says “small test” is safe, though.
IrisCore IrisCore
Sounds reasonable, but keep the power budget tight and the cooling channel precise. A few centimetres over a microsecond will still generate a lot of heat. Let’s map the temperature profile, then tweak the pulse shape to minimize shock. Fun is good, but only if the prototype survives the first run.