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PeteWalsh wrote:This story is in the latest edition of New Scientist magazine, which in turn cites Nature mag as its source. I took this off the NS website but the story in the magazine itself is several paragraphs longer:
During the middle ages, the Muslims who fought crusaders with swords of Damascus steel had an edge - a very high-tech one. Their sabres contained carbon nanotubes.
From about AD 900 to AD 1750, Damascus sabres were forged from Indian steel called wootz. Peter Paufler of the Technical University of Dresden, Germany, and colleagues studied samples of a 17th-century sword under an electron microscope and found clear evidence of carbon nanotubes and even nanowires.
The researchers think that the sophisticated process of forging and annealing the steel formed the nanotubes and the nanowires, and could explain the amazing mechanical properties of the swords (Nature, vol 444, p 286).
PeteWalsh wrote:This story is in the latest edition of New Scientist magazine, which in turn cites Nature mag as its source. I took this off the NS website but the story in the magazine itself is several paragraphs longer:
During the middle ages, the Muslims who fought crusaders with swords of Damascus steel had an edge - a very high-tech one. Their sabres contained carbon nanotubes.
From about AD 900 to AD 1750, Damascus sabres were forged from Indian steel called wootz. Peter Paufler of the Technical University of Dresden, Germany, and colleagues studied samples of a 17th-century sword under an electron microscope and found clear evidence of carbon nanotubes and even nanowires.
The researchers think that the sophisticated process of forging and annealing the steel formed the nanotubes and the nanowires, and could explain the amazing mechanical properties of the swords (Nature, vol 444, p 286).
PeteWalsh wrote:This story is in the latest edition of New Scientist magazine, which in turn cites Nature mag as its source. I took this off the NS website but the story in the magazine itself is several paragraphs longer:
During the middle ages, the Muslims who fought crusaders with swords of Damascus steel had an edge - a very high-tech one. Their sabres contained carbon nanotubes.
From about AD 900 to AD 1750, Damascus sabres were forged from Indian steel called wootz. Peter Paufler of the Technical University of Dresden, Germany, and colleagues studied samples of a 17th-century sword under an electron microscope and found clear evidence of carbon nanotubes and even nanowires.
The researchers think that the sophisticated process of forging and annealing the steel formed the nanotubes and the nanowires, and could explain the amazing mechanical properties of the swords (Nature, vol 444, p 286).
Sunay Angel Sidrón-Hord wrote:PeteWalsh wrote:This story is in the latest edition of New Scientist magazine, which in turn cites Nature mag as its source. I took this off the NS website but the story in the magazine itself is several paragraphs longer:
During the middle ages, the Muslims who fought crusaders with swords of Damascus steel had an edge - a very high-tech one. Their sabres contained carbon nanotubes.
From about AD 900 to AD 1750, Damascus sabres were forged from Indian steel called wootz. Peter Paufler of the Technical University of Dresden, Germany, and colleagues studied samples of a 17th-century sword under an electron microscope and found clear evidence of carbon nanotubes and even nanowires.
The researchers think that the sophisticated process of forging and annealing the steel formed the nanotubes and the nanowires, and could explain the amazing mechanical properties of the swords (Nature, vol 444, p 286).
Can you please give us the issue number / information, the name of the writer and their contact information?
Sunay Angel Sidrón-Hord wrote: I'm being picky here...
Isn't the proper term "Islamic swords" not "Muslim swords"? I'm not trying to be all PC about it just wondering as to the proper sword terminology is all. We wouldn't call European swords "Christian swords" would we? Correct me if I'm wrong please.
I'm sorry if I'm being a pest.
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