Superconductor Breakthrough Claims Traced to a Basement Lab in Seoul
In a neighborhood in Seoul there's an ordinary red-brick, four-story building, reports Bloomberg - but there's something unique about the building's basement office. It's somehow the registered address of the Centre "whose extraordinary claims about a breakthrough in superconductor technology have shocked the scientific community and captivated the world." Bloomberg also reports that: - "No one responded when a Bloomberg News reporter knocked on the center's locked doors or reached out via LinkedIn." - "Goods including bottles of sparkling water delivered to the center's address have been left untouched outside the office's entrance." - "Multiple attempts to reach the scientists at the Quantum Energy Research Centre were not answered." - "The center's website has also been closed and says it is 'under construction.'" However, Kim Hyun Tak, one of the authors of the papers who is a research professor of physics at the College of William & Mary in Virginia, said the skeptical reaction is expected. "It's common practice when a new crucial discovery or invention is made public that there are more people who say that it's not credible," Kim said in a Zoom interview. "It's a natural thing for some people to laugh at it because it's the first time, and they don't even know what it is, but as time passes, they start to believe it...." In response to questions about why the Quantum Energy Research Centre hasn't provided the materials to other scientists, Kim said that it doesn't have enough inventory of the LK-99 compound nor time to recreate it, and that the researchers have been distracted by the number of journalists trying to contact them. "You know that the office is extremely small and in a poor state." he said. "It's so small, and you need the money to make the compounds. That's why they cannot mass-produce it." Despite the questions, he remained defiant that the research was sound. "The experimental data speaks for itself," Kim said. "We know it because we're the ones who synthesized it and conducted the studies." "The claim has been met with widespread excitement globally," adds Bloomberg, "sending related stocks soaring in South Korea and China, but also skepticism as past claims had been later proven wrong."
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