Forze Hydrogen Racing wants to compete in GT class races
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The Forze Hydrogen Racing team wants to compete in GT class races, competing against the likes of Porsche and Lamborghini.
That’s according to Ricarda Warnat, Operations Manager at Forze Hydrogen Racing, who this morning (May 19) shared the team’s hydrogen-powered racing dreams on the virtual Hydrogen Generation event, hosted by Enapter.
Formed of students from the Technical University of Delft in the Netherlands, the Forze Hydrogen Racing team has big ambitions for the future and really believes that hydrogen will play a part in motorsport.
a Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands
b Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands
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Date: 14 May 2021
This research investigates the potential of glass as a new design tool to highlight and safeguard our historic structures.
Current restoration and conservation treatments with traditional materials bear the risk of conjecture between the original and new elements, whereas the high consolidation demands often result in visually invasive and irreversible solutions. Nowadays, aspects of materiality and aesthetics appear as integral parts of the restoration practices, indicating new materials and technologies in the form of ambiguous gestures rather than absolute and permanent manifestations that prevail over the historic structures. The inherent transparent properties render glass a distinct material that enables the simultaneous
Ball Aerospace Names Two Washington D C -Based Directors to Washington Operations pressreleasepoint.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressreleasepoint.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Lancaster, February 18 - An international team of scientists during recent research has been successful in manipulating magnets at the atomic level. This new discovery will be helpful in attaining fast and energy-efficient future data processing technologies.
The results of this study are published in the prestigious journal Nature Materials by the international team from Lancaster, Delft, Nijmegen, Liege, and Kiev.
Physicist Dr Rostislav Mikhaylovskiy from Lancaster University said: With stalling efficiency trends of current technology, new scientific approaches are especially valuable. Our discovery of the atomically-driven ultrafast control of magnetism opens broad avenues for fast and energy-efficient future data processing technologies essential to keep up with our data hunger.