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May 18, 2022

Termination Shock: Trying To Cool the Earth

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, engineering

A group of 60 scientists called for a moratorium on solar geoengineering last month, including technologies such as stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI). This involves a fleet of aeroplanes releasing aerosol particles – which reflect sunlight back to outer space – into the atmosphere, cooling down the Earth.

SAI might make the sky slightly whiter. But this is the least of our concerns. SAI could pose grave dangers, potentially worse than the warming it seeks to remedy. To understand the risks, we’ve undertaken a risk assessment of this controversial technology.

A cooler Earth means less water would be evaporating from its surfaces into the atmosphere, changing rainfall patterns. This could produce ripple effects across the world’s ecosystems – but the exact nature of these effects depends on how SAI is used. Poor coordination of aerosol release could lead to extreme rainfall in some places and blistering drought in others, further triggering the spread of diseases.

May 18, 2022

This is Raptor 2 🔥 it generates more than 230 tons of thrust at sea level

Posted by in category: space travel

Raptor one “only” had 185 tons. SpaceX engineers are pushing boundaries 💯 Check out the full webcast with the Starship update via the link in our bio. Credit @spacex #spacex #space #raptor2 #raptor #starship #mars

May 18, 2022

NASA Detects Bright Flashes of Light on Jupiter

Posted by in categories: climatology, space

A team of NASA scientists has spotted strange flashes of light known as “transient luminous events” (TLEs) in the upper atmosphere of Jupiter.

Events like these have never been observed on another world until now — though here on Earth, scientists have observed similar flashes of light that occur far above lightning storms here on Earth, triggered by discharges of electricity in the upper atmosphere.

For a while, astronomers have theorized their existence in Jupiter’s massive, turbulent atmosphere. Thanks to new data collected by the ultraviolet spectrograph instrument (UVS) attached to NASA’s Juno spacecraft, a small space probe that’s been orbiting the gas giant since 2016, the team was finally able to confirm their presence, as detailed in a new paper published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets.

May 18, 2022

Google’s DeepMind says it is close to achieving human-level AI

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

New Gato AI is ‘generalist agent’ that can carry out a huge range of complex tasks, from stacking blocks to writing poetry.


Human-level artificial intelligence is close to finally being achieved, according to a lead researcher at Google’s DeepMind AI division.

Dr Nando de Freitas said “the game is over” in the decades-long quest to realise artificial general intelligence (AGI) after DeepMind unveiled an AI system capable of completing a wide range of complex tasks, from stacking blocks to writing poetry.

Continue reading “Google’s DeepMind says it is close to achieving human-level AI” »

May 18, 2022

On the road to cleaner, greener, and faster driving

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

No one likes sitting at a red light. But signalized intersections aren’t just a minor nuisance for drivers; vehicles consume fuel and emit greenhouse gases while waiting for the light to change.

What if motorists could time their trips so they arrive at the intersection when the light is green? While that might be just a lucky break for a human driver, it could be achieved more consistently by an autonomous vehicle that uses artificial intelligence to control its speed.

In a new study, MIT researchers demonstrate a machine-learning approach that can learn to control a fleet of autonomous vehicles as they approach and travel through a signalized intersection in a way that keeps traffic flowing smoothly.

May 18, 2022

“Visualizing the Proton” — Physicists’ Innovative Animation Depicts the Subatomic World in a New Way

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Try to picture a proton — the tiny, positively charged particle within an atomic nucleus — and you may envision a familiar, textbook diagram: a bundle of billiard balls representing quarks and gluons. From the solid sphere model first proposed by John Dalton in 1,803 to the quantum model put forward by Erwin Schrödinger in 1926, there is a storied timeline of physicists attempting to visualize the invisible.

May 18, 2022

Amazon Text-to-Speech group’s research at ICASSP 2022

Posted by in category: futurism

Amazon’s head of text-to-speech research, Andrew Breen, reports on the four papers accepted at this year’s International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Si… See more.


Papers focus on speech conversion and data augmentation — and sometimes both at once.

May 18, 2022

Scientists Just Measured a Mechanical Quantum System Without Destroying It

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

There’s a key aspect of quantum computing you may not have thought about before. Called ‘quantum non-demolition measurements’, they refer to observing certain quantum states without destroying them in the process.

If we want to put together a functioning quantum computer, not having it break down every second while calculations are made would obviously be helpful. Now, scientists have described a new technique for recording quantum non-demolition measurements that shows a lot of promise.

Continue reading “Scientists Just Measured a Mechanical Quantum System Without Destroying It” »

May 18, 2022

A new drug could solve the problem of cataracts, without surgery

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Surgery has always been the remedy for cataracts. However, a new compound might be able to clear the clouding of the lens, shows a new study.

May 18, 2022

Organic Transistors Explained. Printing CPUs at Home. What is Smart Skin

Posted by in categories: health, quantum physics, robotics/AI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ya5o5AEYX3g&feature=share

Slow processing… but good for display devices, interacting with other systems, bio-sensors/health monitoring, etc.


In this video I explain Organic Flexible CPUs and Organic Transistors. What is the-state-of-the-art of Organic Electronics? If this technology can replace Silicon Chips or not?
#CPU #OrganicCPU #FlexibleCPU

Continue reading “Organic Transistors Explained. Printing CPUs at Home. What is Smart Skin” »