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Jun 8, 2022

The world’s first liquid telescope for astronomy is now in India. How does it differ?

Posted by in category: space

India launches its first liquid-mirror telescope for astronomy, which is Asia’s largest and the only one of its kind operational in the world.

Jun 8, 2022

Elusive particle discovered in a material through tabletop experiment

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics, quantum physics

An interdisciplinary team led by Boston College physicists has discovered a new particle—or previously undetectable quantum excitation—known as the axial Higgs mode, a magnetic relative of the mass-defining Higgs Boson particle, the team reports in the online edition of the journal Nature.

The detection a decade ago of the long-sought Higgs Boson became central to the understanding of mass. Unlike its parent, axial Higgs mode has a , and that requires a more complex form of the theory to explain its properties, said Boston College Professor of Physics Kenneth Burch, a lead co-author of the report “Axial Higgs Mode Detected by Quantum Pathway Interference in RTe3.”

Theories that predicted the existence of such a mode have been invoked to explain “,” the nearly invisible material that makes up much of the universe, but only reveals itself via gravity, Burch said.

Jun 8, 2022

Is technology spying on you? New AI could prevent eavesdropping

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

“Neural Voice Camouflage” disguises words with custom noise.

Jun 8, 2022

Rectal Cancer Disappears After Experimental Use of Immunotherapy

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Sascha Roth remembers the phone call came on a hectic Friday evening.

She was racing around her home in Washington, D.C., to pack for New York, where she was scheduled to undergo weeks of radiation therapy for rectal cancer. But the phone call from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) medical oncologist Andrea Cercek changed everything, leaving Sascha “stunned and ecstatic — I was so happy.”

Continue reading “Rectal Cancer Disappears After Experimental Use of Immunotherapy” »

Jun 8, 2022

Gwynne Shotwell, President and COO of SpaceX

Posted by in category: space travel

“Aim high. We have always achieved what we wanted to, never in the timeline. We fail on timeline, but that feels like the right fail to make as oppose to not achieving what you are trying to achieve technically.”

In this View From The Top, Christopher Stromeyer, MBA ’22, sits down with Gwynne Shotwell, President and COO of SpaceX, to discuss balancing ambitious goals, putting people on Mars in a decade, leading collaboratively, and why she likes making decisions with data.

Continue reading “Gwynne Shotwell, President and COO of SpaceX” »

Jun 8, 2022

A breakthrough drug trial astonished doctors

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Jun 8, 2022

High-Rise Piggeries: What China’s Pork Industry Transformation Means to U.S. Farmers

Posted by in categories: food, sustainability

Jun 8, 2022

Traditional toolmaker turns to Vtex to help it on its digitalisation journey

Posted by in category: futurism

The 179-year-old tool company Stanley Black & Decker is becoming a model e-commerce player, as global digital enterprise Vtex has helped it transform its digital offering to stay ahead of the game.

Jun 8, 2022

Ingenuity has Lost its Sense of Direction, but It’ll Keep on Flying

Posted by in categories: computing, information science, space

The Ingenuity chopper on Mars has lost an instrument that helps it navigate. Flight controllers have found a work-around.


Things are getting challenging for the Ingenuity helicopter on Mars. The latest news from Håvard Grip, its chief pilot, is that the “Little Chopper that Could” has lost its sense of direction thanks to a failed instrument. Never mind that it was designed to make only a few flights, mostly in Mars spring. Or that it’s having a hard time staying warm now that winter is coming. Now, one of its navigation sensors, called an inclinometer, has stopped working. It’s not the end of the world, though. “A nonworking navigation sensor sounds like a big deal – and it is – but it’s not necessarily an end to our flying at Mars,” Grip wrote on the Mars Helicopter blog on June 6. It turns out that the controllers have options.

Like other NASA planetary missions, Ingenuity sports a fair amount of redundancy in its systems. It has an inertial measurement unit (IMU) that measures accelerations and angular rates of ascent and descent in three directions. In addition, there’s a laser rangefinder that measures the distance to the ground. Finally, the chopper has a navigation camera. It gives visual evidence of where Ingenuity is during flight or on the ground. An algorithm takes data from these instruments and uses it during flight. But, it needs to know the chopper’s roll and pitch attitude, and that’s what the inclinometer supplies.

Continue reading “Ingenuity has Lost its Sense of Direction, but It’ll Keep on Flying” »

Jun 8, 2022

Cellular secrets unlocked by researchers lead to new theory for aging

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension

New research has uncovered how genetic changes that accumulate slowly in blood stem cells throughout life are likely to be responsible for the dramatic change in blood production after the age of 70.

The study, by scientists at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, the Wellcome-MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute and collaborators, has been published in the journal Nature.

Longevity. Technology: Has our understanding of one of the mechanisms of aging taken a quantum leap? Molecular damage accumulates throughout our lives, gradually increasing year-on-year as we suffer telomere attrition, mutation, epigenetic change and oxidative and replicative stress. It’s a double whammy as our ability to repair this damage also declines as we age, but given the gradual nature of these processes, why, as the paper authors themselves put it, “Is there an abrupt increase in mortality after 70 years of age? [1].