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Mar 17, 2022

The World in 2300: Top 9 Future Technologies

Posted by in categories: biological, bitcoin, finance, mathematics, physics, Ray Kurzweil, robotics/AI, singularity

This video covers the world in 2,300 and its future technologies. Watch this next video about the world in 2200: https://bit.ly/3htaWEr.
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► M1 Finance: Open A Roth IRA And Get Up To $500: https://bit.ly/3KHZvq0
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► Udacity: 75% Off All Courses (Biggest Discount Ever): https://bit.ly/3j9pIRZ
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► Business Ideas Academy: Start A Business You Love: https://bit.ly/3KI7B1S

SOURCES:
https://www.futuretimeline.net.
• The Future of Humanity (Michio Kaku): https://amzn.to/3Gz8ffA
• The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology (Ray Kurzweil): https://amzn.to/3ftOhXI
• Physics of the Future (Michio Kaku): https://amzn.to/33NP7f7
https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-m…tation.htm.

Continue reading “The World in 2300: Top 9 Future Technologies” »

Mar 17, 2022

Materials scientists discover why perovskite solar cells degrade in sunlight

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability

Materials scientists at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering and colleagues from five other universities around the world have discovered the major reason why perovskite solar cells—which show great promise for improved energy-conversion efficiency—degrade in sunlight, causing their performance to suffer over time. The team successfully demonstrated a simple manufacturing adjustment to fix the cause of the degradation, clearing the biggest hurdle toward the widespread adoption of the thin-film solar cell technology.

A detailing the findings was published today in Nature. The research is led by Yang Yang, a UCLA Samueli professor of materials science and engineering and holder of the Carol and Lawrence E. Tannas, Jr., Endowed Chair. The co-first authors are Shaun Tan and Tianyi Huang, both recent UCLA Samueli Ph.D. graduates whom Yang advised.

Perovskites are a group of materials that have the same atomic arrangement or crystal structure as the mineral calcium titanium oxide. A subgroup of perovskites, , are of great research interest because of their promising application for energy-efficient, .

Mar 17, 2022

1st image from NASA’s new IXPE X-ray telescope looks like a ball of purple lightning

Posted by in categories: climatology, cosmology

NASA’s newly-launched X-ray hunting probe has snapped its first science image and — wow — it’s spectacular.

The Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) probe launched Dec. 9, 2021, on a mission to observe objects like black holes and neutron stars in X-ray light, shedding much-anticipated light on the inner workings of the cosmos. The probe spent its first month in space checking out its various systems to get ready to capture its first images, and now the IXPE team has released its very first science image.

Mar 16, 2022

Why don’t RTD’s trains go into Denver’s neighborhoods?

Posted by in category: transportation

Need to get to a park-and-ride in the suburbs? No problem. Somewhere in the city? Get on the bus.

Mar 16, 2022

Temperature-dependent model to calculate solar LCOE

Posted by in category: energy

Developed by researchers in Saudi Arabia, the novel approach considers both the power yield and the solar module time to failure (TTF), among other factors. According to its creators, the model can be applied to all kinds of module and cell technologies.

Mar 16, 2022

‘Deepfake’ viral video of Ukraine’s President surrendering goes viral on Facebook and YouTube

Posted by in category: futurism

It seems some people are using deepfake to misinform people.


Facebook and YouTube said Wednesday that they removed uploads of a deepfake video of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky that purported to show him yielding to Russia.

Mar 16, 2022

SpaceX rapidly stacks Starship and Super Heavy with ‘Mechazilla’

Posted by in category: space travel

For the second time ever, SpaceX has used Starbase’s ‘Mechazilla’ tower and arms to stack a Starship upper stage on top of a Super Heavy booster.

This time around, though, SpaceX clearly learned a great deal from its second February 9th Starship stack and was able to complete the stacking process several times faster on March 15th. During the second attempt, depending on how one measures it, it took SpaceX around three and a half hours from the start of the lift to Starship fully resting on Super Heavy. With Stack #3, however, SpaceX was able to lift, translate, lower, and attach Starship to Super Heavy in just over an hour.

Oddly, SpaceX managed that feat without a claw-like device meant to grab and stabilize Super Heavy during stacking operations. For Stack #2, all three arms were fully in play. First, a pair of ‘chopsticks’ – giant arms meant to grab, lift, and even recover Starships and boosters – grabbed Ship 20, lifted it close to 100 meters (~300 ft) above the ground, rotated it over top of Super Heavy, and briefly paused. A third arm – known as the ship quick-disconnect or umbilical arm – swung in and extended its ‘claw’ to grab onto hardpoints located near the top of Super Heavy. Once the booster was secured, the ‘chopsticks’ slowly lowered Ship 20 onto Booster 4’s interstage and six clamps joined the two stages together.

Mar 16, 2022

Scientist May Have Found The Secret To Letting Humans BREATHE In Space With Genius Science Trick

Posted by in categories: science, space travel, sustainability

Bacteria might be the solution to all of our space breathing issues. According to Mashable, scientists may use cyanobacteria to figure out how humans might quickly acquire oxygen in space.

Cyanobacteria convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. Cyanobacteria are found in extremely difficult settings on Earth, thus it is predicted that they would be able to live on Mars.

Some scientists have proposed transporting the bacterium to Mars to test whether it can produce oxygen for future people who could end up there. Experiments have previously demonstrated that cyanobacteria can flourish in a Martian environment.

Mar 16, 2022

Ray Kurzweil Quotes

Posted by in categories: futurism, Ray Kurzweil

The best of Ray Kurzweil Quotes, as voted by Quotefancy readers. Updated March 2022. Download free, high-quality (4K) pictures and wallpapers featuring Ray Kurzweil Quotes.

Mar 16, 2022

Astronomers Think They’ve Just Spotted an ‘Invisible’ Black Hole for the First Time

Posted by in category: cosmology

Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity predicted that massive objects will bend light as it travels past them. That means that any light passing very close to an invisible black hole—but not close enough to end up inside it—will be bent in a similar way to light passing through a lens. This is called gravitational lensing, and can be spotted when a foreground object aligns with a background object, bending its light. The method has already been used to study everything from clusters of galaxies to planets around other stars.

The authors of this new research combined two types of gravitational lensing observations in their search for black holes. It started with them spotting light from a distant star suddenly magnify, briefly making it appear brighter before going back to normal. They could not see any foreground object that was causing the magnification via the process of gravitational lensing, though. That suggested the object might be a lone black hole, something which had never been seen before. The problem was that it could also just have been a faint star.

Figuring out if it was a black hole or a faint star required a lot of work, and that’s where the second type of gravitational lensing observations came in. The authors repeatedly took images with Hubble for six years, measuring how far the star appeared to move as its light was deflected.