Nickel–cadmium battery https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel%E2%80%93cadmium_battery Wet-cell nickel-cadmium batteries were invented in 1899. Among rechargeable battery technologies, NiCd rapidly lost market share in the 1990s, to NiMH and Li-ion batteries; History The first Ni–Cd battery was created by Waldemar Jungner of Sweden in 1899. At that time, the only direct competitor was the lead–acid battery, which was less physically and chemically robust.
Nickel–metal hydride battery https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel%E2%80%93metal_hydride_battery History Work on NiMH batteries began at the Battelle-Geneva Research Center following the technology's invention in 1967. Development was sponsored over nearly two decades by Daimler-Benz and by Volkswagen AG within Deutsche Automobilgesellschaft, now a subsidiary of Daimler AG. The first consumer-grade NiMH cells became commercially available in 1989. In 1998, Ovonic Battery Co. improved the Ti–Ni alloy structure and composition and patented its innovations. In 2008, more than two million hybrid cars worldwide were manufactured with NiMH batteries.[ In the European Union and due to its Battery Directive, nickel metal hydride batteries replaced Ni–Cd batteries for portable consumer use. 0092名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:14:29.41ID:ghTa2utB0 日本語版wikiは説明がないぞ。 0093名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:15:08.14ID:ghTa2utB0 昔のウォークマンは全部、ニッケルカドミウム電池かニッケル水素電池だったぞ。 0094名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:15:21.39ID:8sqUJ/j+0>>90 ニッカド、ニッ水は結局は乾電池の範疇を越えられなかった。リチウムイオンほどの効率を稼げなかった 0095名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:15:44.01ID:ghTa2utB0 あ、大事なことだからはっきりさせておくが、 俺は日本が嫌いだ。俺はドイツが嫌いだ。俺はナチが嫌いだ。 0096名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:15:54.37ID:NypIJe160 多分そっちの発明者は存命ではないのだろう。 0097名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:16:55.30ID:ghTa2utB0>>94
>>91のwikipediaには、 In 2008, more than two million hybrid cars worldwide were manufactured with NiMH batteries.[ 「2008年には、200万台以上のハイブリッドカーにニッケル水素電池を搭載」、って書いてあるぞ。 0098名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:17:35.44ID:ya+sT3AB0>>55 身内なんだから呼び捨てじゃなきゃおかしいだろw 0099名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:19:50.34ID:sf6cE2Ke0>>95 韓国本国からは「在日」は大嫌いだと言われているよ。 0100名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:20:44.43ID:ghTa2utB0 さらに>>91のwikipediaには、 「EUバッテリー命令」により、「水銀・鉛・カドミウムの使用を禁止」、と書いてある。 どうも政治的意図を感じる。
Battery Directive https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battery_Directive The Directive 2006/66/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 September 2006 on batteries and accumulators and waste batteries and accumulators and repealing Directive 91/157/EEC, commonly known as the Battery Directive, regulates the manufacture and disposal of batteries in the European Union with the aim of "improving the environmental performance of batteries and accumulators".[1]:4[2] Batteries commonly contain hazardous elements such as mercury, cadmium, and lead, which when incinerated or landfilled, present a risk to the environment and human health. Directive 91/157/EEC was adopted on 18 March 1991 to reduce these hazards by harmonising EU member states' laws on the disposal and recycling of batteries containing dangerous substances.[ Directive 2006/66/EC repealed Directive 91/157/EEC and 0101名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:22:29.32ID:tkCR4mVg0 今回の受賞者はまた京都大学、大阪大学だったが、 東京大学でノーベル賞なんて長いこと聞かないが 発明禁止とかの校則ができたのかな? 発明なんてものは最初から馬鹿にしているのかな? 0102名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 13:22:36.52ID:ghTa2utB0>>99 俺は韓国人ではない。その証明は簡単。日本にアフリカおよび東南アジアからの移民を増やせ。君たちジャップが反アジアな証明もできる。
Many car plants — they’re coming in from Japan. I told Prime Minister Abe — great guy. I said, “Listen, we have a massive deficit with Japan.” They send thousands and thousands — millions — of cars. We send them wheat. Wheat. (Laughter.) That’s not a good deal. And they don’t even want our wheat. They do it because they want us to at least feel that we’re okay. You know, they do it to make us feel good.
[White House]August 13, 2019 Remarks by President Trump on American Energy and Manufacturing | Monaca, PA https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-american-energy-manufacturing-monaco-pa/ But we’re losing $78 billion. For many years, we’re losing billions and billions with these countries. And, frankly, the countries that we do the worst with are the allies — our allies. Does that make sense to you? Our allies take advantage of us far greater than our enemies. And someday, I’m going to explain that to a lot of people.
Curtis LeMay https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtis_LeMay LeMay is credited with designing and implementing an effective, but also controversial, systematic strategic bombing campaign in the Pacific theater of World War II.
World War II In August 1944, LeMay transferred to the China-Burma-India theater and directed first the XX Bomber Command in China and then the XXI Bomber Command in the Pacific. LeMay was later placed in charge of all strategic air operations against the Japanese home islands.
LeMay finally switched to low-altitude nighttime incendiary attacks on Japanese targets, a tactic senior commanders had been advocating for some time. LeMay commanded subsequent B-29 Superfortress combat operations against Japan, including massive incendiary attacks on 67 Japanese cities and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This included the firebombing of Tokyo - known in official documents as the "Operation Meetinghouse" air raid on the night of March 9-10, 1945 - which proved to be the single most destructive bombing raid of the war.
Precise figures are not available, but the strategic bombing campaign against Japan, directed by LeMay between March 1945 and the Japanese surrender in August 1945, may have killed more than 500,000 Japanese civilians and left five million homeless. Presidents Roosevelt and Truman supported LeMay's strategy, referring to an estimate of one million Allied casualties if Japan had to be invaded. Japan had intentionally decentralized 90% of its war-related production into small subcontractor workshops in civilian districts, making remaining Japanese war industry largely immune to conventional precision bombing with high explosives. As the firebombing campaign took effect, Japanese war planners were forced to expend significant resources to relocate vital war industries to remote caves and mountain bunkers, reducing production of war materiel.
6 Post-military career 6.3 Honors He was also a recipient of the French Legion d'honneur and on December 7, 1964 the Japanese government conferred on him the First Order of Merit with the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun.
11 Awards and decorations Japanese Order of the Rising Sun, Grand Cordon 0148名無しさん@1周年2019/10/10(木) 15:09:39.23ID:ghTa2utB0>>122 お前らジャップが名家ヅラするのも笑える。(俺は別に、名家が偉いとは言ってないぞ。俺はアフリカ系米国人になりたい。俺は米国の99%の一人になりたい。Black Lives Matter!)