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Fallout 4 uses "Black Ice" as a construction material during a cyberspace hacking minigame in the Far Harbor DLC. Mr. Robot, where "ICE" in its RPG part refers to shields or armor that can be attacked by various "ICE breaker"s; Midnight Protocol, where "ICE" is an umbrella term for security measures that shield nodes from being accessed
The ICE technology uses a scanner with a pair of light sources, a normal RGB lamp and an infrared (IR) lamp, and scans twice, once with each lamp. The IR lamp detects the dust locations with its unique detection method, and then inpainting is applied based on this data afterwards. The general concept is locate scratches and dust on the RGB ...
An ice detector is an instrument that detects the presence of ice on a surface. Ice detectors are used to identify the presence of icing conditions and are commonly used in aviation, [1] unmanned aircraft, [2] marine vessels, [3] wind energy, [4] and power lines. [5] Ice detection can be done with direct and indirect methods.
Black ice on a road in Germany. Black ice, sometimes called clear ice, is a coating of glaze ice on a surface, for example on streets or on lakes. The ice itself is not black, but visually transparent, allowing the often black road below to be seen through it and light to be transmitted. The typically low levels of noticeable ice pellets, snow ...
This ice-free airplane wing uses Thermawing's Aircraft Anti-Icing System, a NASA spin-off. NASA funding under the SBIR program and work with NASA scientists advanced the development of a thermoelectric deicing system called Thermawing , a DC-powered air conditioner for single-engine aircraft called Thermacool, and high-output alternators to run ...
An operational, non-fictional cloaking device might be an extension of the basic technologies used by stealth aircraft, such as radar-absorbing dark paint, optical camouflage, cooling the outer surface to minimize electromagnetic emissions (usually infrared), or other techniques to minimize other EM emissions, and to minimize particle emissions from the object.
Before the invention of artificial refrigeration technology, ice making by nocturnal cooling was common in both India and Iran. In India, such apparatuses consisted of a shallow ceramic tray with a thin layer of water, placed outdoors with a clear exposure to the night sky. The bottom and sides were insulated with a thick layer of hay.
Contemporary electronic RMS detectors had "normal", linear outputs, and were built exactly following the definition of RMS. The detector would compute square of the input signal, time-average the square using a low-pass filter or an integrator, and then compute square root of that average to produce linear, not logarithmic, output.