The Egyptian is way out on his own for goals scored (28) and assists (18) and has set the record for the most goal involvements in a 38-game season.
Ms Sachar says that we still need refrigerants because for home cooling, "A/Cs as we know them today will continue to be the solution, at least for the next decade or so".In the longer term, some scientists are looking toward cooling devices that don't need liquid refrigerants at all.
Lindsay Rasmussen, who manages building and land-use projects at the energy non-profit RMI, calls these "revolutionary technologies".A major set of revolutionary cooling tech is solid-state cooling. This uses solid materials and some sort of additional force to induce temperature changes. That extra force could be pressure, voltage, magnets or mechanical stress.Ms Rasmussen says that solid-state devices can go further than incremental improvements because "not only do they eliminate those super-polluting refrigerants, but they can also offer improved efficiency to the systems".
RMI has identified between 10 and 20 start-ups working on early versions of solid-state cooling devices.One of those startups is the German company Magnotherm, which uses magnets. Certain materials change temperature when exposed to magnetic fields.
"With our technology, it's inherently safe because it's not toxic, it's a metal, and we operate at very low pressures," according to Timur Sirman, the CEO and cofounder of Magnotherm.
The idea of magnetocaloric cooling has been around for years, but commercialising it is relatively new. Magnotherm has built about 40 beverage coolers, and about five refrigerators, in what is so far a manual and in-house process.International pressure on Israel has continued to grow.
Theover what it described as Israel's "morally unjustifiable" military escalation in Gaza, with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer describing the situation as "intolerable".
Meanwhile, the EU's foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the bloc would be reviewing its trade agreement with Israel in light of its actions in Gaza.Dujarric said the aid operation was made "complex" as Israel required the UN to "offload supplies on the Palestinian side of the Kerem Shalom crossing, and reload them separately once they secure our teams' access from inside the Gaza Strip".