Archive for the ‘military’ category: Page 127
Mar 2, 2021
This complex microbial warfare is taking place in a single drop of water
Posted by Vivek Jaiswal in category: military
Mar 1, 2021
SpaceX wins Air Force manufacturing research contract for hypersonic vehicle thermal shields
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: military, space travel
The Air Force Research Laboratory awarded SpaceX an $8.5 million contract to investigate manufacturing techniques for heat shields that protect hypersonic vehicles in flight.
WASHINGTON — The Air Force Research Laboratory awarded SpaceX an $8.5 million contract to investigate advanced materials and manufacturing techniques for heat shields that protect hypersonic vehicles in flight.
Heat protection is a critical technology to shield hypersonic vehicles from the intense heat experienced when flying at more than five times the speed of sound.
Feb 26, 2021
Away From Silicon Valley, the Military Is the Ideal Customer
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: drones, military
The Defense Department is hungry for small drones that will track objects and fly into buildings, combat zones and other dangerous areas with little help from remote pilots. Self-piloting drones will become a key part of fighting and other military activities in the years to come, said Mike Brown, director of the Defense Innovation Unit, a Pentagon organization that aims to facilitate cooperation between the military and the tech industry.
While much has been made of tech’s unwillingness to work with the Pentagon, start-ups are still plumbing the industry’s decades-long ties to the military.
Feb 24, 2021
CNN exclusive: A solar panel in space is collecting energy that could one day be beamed to anywhere on Earth
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: military, solar power, space, sustainability
The unit has yet to actually send power directly back to Earth, but that technology has already been proven. If the project develops into huge kilometers-wide space solar antennae, it could beam microwaves that would then be converted into fuel-free electricity to any part of the planet at a moment’s notice.
Scientists working for the Pentagon have successfully tested a solar panel the size of a pizza box in space, designed as a prototype for a future system to send electricity from space back to any point on Earth.
Feb 20, 2021
The U.S. and China Are Annoying Each Other With a Ton of Warplanes
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: military, surveillance
Things are getting pretty heated in the South China Sea.
The United States and China are engaged in the first military back-and-forth of the new year, sending many ships and aircraft into the South China Sea over the past few days.
This latest round kicked off with the return of an American carrier battle group to the region, followed by an unprecedented flight of eight Chinese bombers into nearby Taiwan’s air defense identification zone (ADIZ). Both sides piled on more fighters, surveillance aircraft, and bombers, making this dance-off a considerable escalation over previous years.
Continue reading “The U.S. and China Are Annoying Each Other With a Ton of Warplanes” »
Feb 19, 2021
Dr. Hassan Tetteh, MD, Health Mission Chief, Dept. of Defense, Joint Artificial Intelligence Center
Posted by Ira S. Pastor in categories: biotech/medical, business, ethics, government, health, military, policy, robotics/AI
Dr. Hassan A. Tetteh, MD, is the Health Mission Chief, at the Department of Defense (DoD) Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, serving to advance the objectives of the DoD AI Strategy, and improve war fighter healthcare and readiness with artificial intelligence implementations.
Dr. Tetteh is also an Associate Professor of Surgery at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, adjunct faculty at Howard University College of Medicine, a Thoracic Staff Surgeon for MedStar Health and Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, and leads a Specialized Thoracic Adapted Recovery (STAR) Team, in Washington, DC, where his research in thoracic transplantation aims to expand heart and lung recovery and save lives.
Feb 17, 2021
Modified Laser Cutter Fabricates a Ready to Fly Drone
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: computing, drones, military
This bolt-on system creates a drone that can fly straight out of your fabricator.
It’s been very cool to watch 3D printers and laser cutters evolve into fairly common tools over the last decade-ish, finding useful niches across research, industry, and even with hobbyists at home. Capable as these fabricators are, they tend to be good at just one specific thing: making shapes out of polymer. Which is great! But we have all kinds of other techniques for making things that are even more useful, like by adding computers and actuators and stuff like that. You just can’t do that with your 3D printer or laser cutter, because it just does its one thing—which is too bad.
Continue reading “Modified Laser Cutter Fabricates a Ready to Fly Drone” »
Feb 14, 2021
Grumman’s LongShot drone can search & destroy
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: drones, military, robotics/AI
Instead of firing missiles, planes may carry and launch unmanned drones that will be able to shoot their own missiles to search and destroy targets.
Aerospace giant Northrop Grumman is wasting no time in this competition.
Just two days after DARPA named it as one of three competitors for the LongShot contract, the company released an image of its concept for an air-launched unmanned aircraft system (UAS), Aviation Week reported.
Continue reading “Grumman’s LongShot drone can search & destroy” »
Feb 14, 2021
US Navy Research Lab engineers 3D print functional lightweight cylindrical antenna arrays
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: 3D printing, military
Engineers at the US Navy Research Laboratory (NRL) have deployed a 3D printer to fabricate optimized antenna components that could be key to advancing the US Navy’s radar monitoring capabilities.
Utilizing 3D printing, the engineers were able to create cylindrical arrays at a lower cost and with reduced lead times compared to those incurred using conventional specialized equipment. The resulting parts also proved to be significantly lighter than previous iterations, potentially lending them new end-use navigational or defense applications.
“3D printing is a way to produce rapid prototypes and get through multiple design iterations very quickly, with minimal cost,” said NRL electrical engineer Anna Stumme. “The light weight of the printed parts also allows us to take technology to new applications, where the heavy weight of solid metal parts used to restrict us.”