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Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 610

Jul 19, 2019

Memories Of A NASA Engineer: A Birthday, A Moon Landing, And A Close Encounter With Neil Armstrong

Posted by in category: space

A story 50 years in the making.

Jul 19, 2019

New moon: What lunar living will look like in 100 years

Posted by in category: space

A whole new moon

Lava tubes. Cave cities. Extreme sports. The next century of lunar settlement is wilder than you think.

by Chris Taylor

Jul 19, 2019

TRUMP CELEBRATES MOON LANDING: Pres

Posted by in category: space

Trump meets with astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins and the family of Neil Armstrong to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing.

Jul 19, 2019

Building Giant Magellan, the world’s largest telescope

Posted by in category: space

People have been gazing skyward at night for all of human history, studying the stars and wondering what could lie beyond them. But soon, scientists will have a powerful new tool at their disposal: the Giant Magellan Telescope, which is expected to be the world’s largest optical telescope once it’s completed.

Under the football stadium at the University of Arizona, Patrick McCarthy, the vice president and senior astronomer at the GMT project, heads the international group building the Giant Magellan.

“One of the big discoveries in astronomy in the past 20 years is that 97% of the universe, we have no idea what it is,” McCarthy said.

Jul 19, 2019

Rocket Rundown

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space

Stunning payload separation footage of the UP Aerospace SL-10 rocket. One of the four payloads deployed was a test version of the Maraia Capsule, a concept that was to be used to provide the inexpensive and autonomous on-demand return of small science samples from the International Space Station. Credit: UP Aerospace.

Jul 19, 2019

The World’s Smallest MRI Machine Just Captured The Magnetic Field of a Single Atom

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, quantum physics, space

Using a new technique, scientists have performed the world’s smallest magnetic resonance imaging to capture the magnetic fields of single atoms. It’s an incredible breakthrough that could improve quantum research, as well as our understanding of the Universe on subatomic scales.

“I am very excited about these results,” said physicist Andreas Heinrich of the Institute for Basic Sciences in Seoul. “It is certainly a milestone in our field and has very promising implications for future research.”

You’re probably most familiar with magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, as a method used to image internal body structures in medicine. An MRI machine uses highly powerful magnets to induce a strong magnetic field around the body, forcing the spin of the protons in the nuclei of your body’s hydrogen atoms to align with the magnetic field, all without producing side-effects.

Jul 18, 2019

Tomasz Mielnik Panoramic Photography 2

Posted by in category: space

Panorama 360, Moon, Apollo 11 — vol. 2 Apollo 50th anniversary Apollo 11.

Jul 18, 2019

After a thunderous launch on a Saturn V rocket

Posted by in category: space

After a thunderous launch on a Saturn V rocket, a three day journey through the unforgiving environment of space and a daring descent in the Lunar Module, you’re here: standing on the Moon. Look around and take in the sights of the surface, just as Apollo 17 astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt saw it almost 5 decades ago. #Apollo50th

https://go.nasa.gov/2YWTVI7

Jul 18, 2019

NASA Releases Stunning Panoramas of Apollo Landing Sites for 50th Anniversary

Posted by in category: space

After a thunderous launch on a Saturn V rocket, a three day journey through the unforgiving environment of space and a daring descent in the Lunar Module, you’re here: standing on the Moon. Look around and take in the sights of the surface, just as Apollo 17 astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt saw it almost 5 decades ago. #Apollo50th


NASA imagery experts at NASA’s Johnson Space Center have “stitched together” images from the Apollo landing sites on the Moon for a 50th anniversary reminder of what the 12 humans who walked on its surface experience visually.

Individual images taken by the Apollo astronauts were pulled together by NASA imagery specialist Warren Harold at Johnson, and the accuracy of the unique perspective they represent was verified by Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison “Jack” Schmitt, the only geologist to walk on the Moon.

Continue reading “NASA Releases Stunning Panoramas of Apollo Landing Sites for 50th Anniversary” »

Jul 17, 2019

Australian Researchers Have Just Released The World’s First AI-Developed Vaccine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, information science, robotics/AI, space

A team at Flinders University in South Australia has developed a new vaccine believed to be the first human drug in the world to be completely designed by artificial intelligence (AI).

While drugs have been designed using computers before, this vaccine went one step further being independently created by an AI program called SAM (Search Algorithm for Ligands).

Flinders University Professor Nikolai Petrovsky who led the development told Business Insider Australia its name is derived from what it was tasked to do: search the universe for all conceivable compounds to find a good human drug (also called a ligand).