An ideal Internet for integrated global innovation, development, research, collaboration and learning

@ThriftBooks You have a book on your site with the title “A Study of Cavitation-Ignition Bubble Combustion”. It is listed as “by unknown author”. You can find it at https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20050215681
 
A Study of Cavitation-Ignition Bubble Combustion, Glenn Research Center, Technical Memorandum. Authors are Nguyen, Quang-Viet and Jacqmin, David A. It was published 1 Aug 2005 but acquired 7 Sep 2013.
 
It is interesting they use the term “micro-diesel effect”. Years ago I worked at Phillips Petroleum on clean air and global climate change. For emissions and quality control there are standard diesel engines and measurements. Using cavitation as an ignition source is innovative and intriguing.
 
I review topics in the Internet pretty much every day. In the process I see many issues on the Internet. It is a form of guided random sampling. Today I was looking at cavitation, plasma conduction and ion detection.
 
Many times authors are not notified of the uses of their works. This happens much on Wikipedia, but also where people simply copy and repeat things they find. An ideal Internet would track sources and the people (what are they doing now?).
 
Filed as (An ideal Internet for integrated global innovation, development, research, collaboration and learning)
 
Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation
Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

The Internet Foundation Internet policies, global issues, global open lossless data, global open collaboration


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