BBC Focus

(Marcin) #1
You’d feel paralysed! The only time this
has been tried was in 1970 when Robert
White transplanted the head of a monkey
onto the body of another, decapitated
monkey. This gruesome hybrid was
conscious, but paralysed from the neck
down because we can’t yet reattach
severed nerves. If we ever get past this
obstacle, body transplants will still take
a lot of getting used to. For one thing,
your brain would be exposed to a
different cocktail of hormones. LV

PHOTOS: ISTOCK X2 ILLUSTRATION: CHRIS PHILPOT



  1. SIT TIGHT
    Unless the building suffers catastrophic damage,
    such a s during the World Trade Center att ack s of
    2001, lifts almost never fall. A lift has between
    six and 12 independent cables and each one is
    strong enough to support a fully loaded lift. If all
    the cables fail, brakes will automatically clamp
    onto rails lining the lift shaft.

  2. DON’T JUMP
    Jumping up at the last moment, before the lift
    hits the bottom, only works in cartoons. Even
    if you were somehow strong enough to leap
    fast enough to negate your falling velocity,
    you would just smash your head against
    the lift ceiling at the same speed you had
    been falling!

  3. FALL FROM THE TOP FLOOR
    In 1945 a B-25 bomber cra shed into the Empire
    State Building and damaged the lift cables. Betty
    Lou Oliver fell 75 storeys, breaking her neck, back
    and pelvis, but survived. The huge length of steel
    lift cables hanging beneath the lift car coiled into
    a springy mat at the bottom of the shaft and this
    partly cushioned her fall.


IF A LIFT IS FALLING, WHAT’S YOUR BEST CHANCE


OF STAYING ALIVE?


THE THOUGHT EXPERIMENT

If I put my brain in another
body, would I feel different?
ARTHUR CHAMBERS, EASTLEIGH

Can computers keep getting faster?
TOBY KRISTEN, TONBRIDGE

The laws of physics stop computers getting faster forever. Computers calculate at
the tick of an internal clock, so for many years manufacturers made transistors
smaller and clocks faster to make them perform more computations per second.
However, conventional electronics get too hot if you make them calculate too fast,
which is why we no longer see clock speeds increasing much. Instead we now have
more and more ‘cores’ – lots of processors all calculating in parallel – to let them
do more work in the same time. Scientists have calculated fundamental limits on
maximum speed and storage achievable by computers. In order to reach those
theoretical limits, you may need to use black holes as quantum computers, and
they would probably evaporate in a puff of Hawking radiation too quickly to allow
them to calculate very much. PB
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