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By Jacob Rintamaki

Broadway Boogie-Woogie

Acknowledgements

I’d like to start by thanking Luke Farritor, who has spent many late nights assisting me with this review, Amir Tarkian, who has been extremely knowledgeable on matters of extreme vacuums, and Anton Troynikov, who gave me the idea of shipping something rather than nothing. :)

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I’d also like to thank My Current [Anonymous] Landlord, Enze Chen, Adam Marblestone, Aydin Gokce, Teddy Ganea, Darson Chen, Martin, Matt Parlmer, Victor Li, Lachlan Sneff, Lukas Suss, Mark Friedenbach, Leo Glikbarg, and Max Newport for their support.

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I’d also like to thank My Current [Anonymous] Landlord, Enze Chen, Adam Marblestone, Aydin Gokce, Teddy Ganea, Darson Chen, Martin, Matt Parlmer, Victor Li, Lachlan Sneff, Lukas Suss, Danila Medvelev, Mark Friedenbach, Leo Glikbarg, and Max Newport for their support.

If there is anyone I have forgotten, I profusely apologize. I could not have done this/continue to do this alone.

tl;dr

The math of Nanosystems seems to work enough to be interesting (even if its not as fast/strong/etc. as the book suggests), yet only a handful of relevant physical experiments have been published.