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Nov 23, 2015

Particle Accelerators Could Soon Fit In A Shoebox

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics

As the challenges of particle physics have become more and more complex, we’ve had to plan and build larger and larger machines to explore the tiny subatomic world. But now, an international group of physicists has developed a technology to miniaturize particle accelerators, which could revolutionize physics and the life sciences.

The team has received a $13.5 million (£9 million) grant to develop a prototype particle accelerator that will fit in a shoebox. The technology being developed is called “accelerator-on-a-chip”. Electrons are made to travel through a channel within a silica chip. Shining a laser onto the chip produces an electric field, and the field is modified by the ridges within the channel. This set-up dramatically accelerates the electrons moving through the channel.

The prototype is based on independent experiments from the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California and Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg (FAU) in Germany. Both teams discovered that these chips are capable of accelerating electrons to relativistic speed no matter the speed at which the electron was travelling before entering the channel. Also, the technology is capable of producing a larger acceleration gradient than current labs, which could reduce the size of particle accelerators – 100 meters (330 feet) of accelerator-on-a-chip would produce an acceleration equivalent to the 3.2-kilometer (two miles) SLAC linear accelerator, which is the longest in the world.

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Nov 23, 2015

Get ready for CYBERPLANTS: Roses that can change colour

Posted by in category: cyborgs

Researchers in Sweden have developed fully functional cyberplants, living plants which are engineered to host analog and digital electronic circuits, and the leaves can change colors. Using the vascular system of living roses, which distributes water and nutrients, the researchers were able to build key components of electronic circuits inside of the plants.

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Nov 23, 2015

There’s a mission to this mysterious water world that could detect the first alien life

Posted by in category: alien life

In February, NASA announced that it was investing in a $2 billion mission to Europa — a tiny moon of Jupiter that is one of the most likely places for life beyond Earth.

Their spacecraft, called the Europa Multi-Flyby Mission, would orbit Jupiter, taking frequent passes by Europa for a close look at its surface.

But there is another important piece of the puzzle that NASA is exploring, and in a recent conversation with US Rep. John Culberson (R-Texas), Ars Technica’s senior space editor, Eric Berger, reported the details — it’s a lander and it could be the key to discovering the first extraterrestrial life.

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Nov 23, 2015

Audi claims 25% of its cars will be electric in 10 years

Posted by in category: transportation

It was an audacious statement, but there it was.

Audi expects that 25 percent of the cars it sells just 10 years hence will be either battery-electric or plug-in hybrid models.

And it came directly from Scott Keogh, president of Audi of America, in front of a packed media audience at the Los Angeles Auto Show.

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Nov 23, 2015

The Biski

Posted by in category: transportation

Introducing the Biski a Jet ski and a Motorcycle in one.

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Nov 23, 2015

Robotic Wheelchair

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

New technology smile

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Nov 23, 2015

This is the first commercial for a mainstream virtual reality headset

Posted by in category: virtual reality

https://youtube.com/watch?v=CjpGnh2PDoU

“Virtual reality just got real.”

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Nov 23, 2015

BITNATION @ The Keiser Report

Posted by in categories: governance, security

BITNATION : Governance 2.0

Bitnation provides the same services traditional governments provides, from dispute resolution and insurance to security and much more.

Continue reading “BITNATION @ The Keiser Report” »

Nov 23, 2015

No lens? No problem for FlatCam

Posted by in categories: computing, electronics, information science

How thin can a camera be? Very, say Rice University researchers who have developed patented prototypes of their technological breakthrough.

FlatCam, invented by the Rice labs of electrical and computer engineers Richard Baraniuk and Ashok Veeraraghavan, is little more than a thin with a mask that replaces lenses in a traditional camera.

Making it practical are the sophisticated computer algorithms that process what the sensor detects and converts the sensor measurements into images and videos.

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Nov 23, 2015

The 10 craziest projects Google has acquired

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Google is investing in artificial intelligence in a big way.

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