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Jan 12, 2022

Seeing the plasma edge of fusion experiments in new ways with artificial intelligence

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, particle physics, robotics/AI

To make fusion energy a viable resource for the world’s energy grid, researchers need to understand the turbulent motion of plasmas: a mix of ions and electrons swirling around in reactor vessels. The plasma particles, following magnetic field lines in toroidal chambers known as tokamaks, must be confined long enough for fusion devices to produce significant gains in net energy, a challenge when the hot edge of the plasma (over 1 million degrees Celsius) is just centimeters away from the much cooler solid walls of the vessel.

Abhilash Mathews, a PhD candidate in the Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering working at MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC), believes this plasma edge to be a particularly rich source of unanswered questions. A turbulent boundary, it is central to understanding plasma confinement, fueling, and the potentially damaging heat fluxes that can strike material surfaces — factors that impact fusion reactor designs.

To better understand edge conditions, scientists focus on modeling turbulence at this boundary using numerical simulations that will help predict the plasma’s behavior. However, “first principles” simulations of this region are among the most challenging and time-consuming computations in fusion research. Progress could be accelerated if researchers could develop “reduced” computer models that run much faster, but with quantified levels of accuracy.

Jan 12, 2022

Harrison Ford: “Stop Giving Power to People Who Don’t Believe in Science”

Posted by in category: science

Celebrities often use their platforms to spread awareness on important issues. But while many of us have become numb to their warnings, there’s something about Harrison Ford that makes people sit up and listen.

Maybe it’s the cult following he’s acquired from playing heroic characters like Indiana Jones and Han Solo.

Jan 12, 2022

A Team of Chemists Have Built the World’s Tiniest Antenna Using DNA

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

It is 20,000 times smaller than human hair, can communicate using light signals, and could potentially work in any lab in the world.

Jan 12, 2022

Fosun and Insilico announce strategic, AI-driven drug discovery collaboration

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

AI-powered, $13 million drug discovery and development collaboration set to jointly advance multiple targets.

Jan 12, 2022

Physicists Discovered a Hybrid Particle. Bound By a Uniquely Strong ‘Glue’?

Posted by in categories: materials, particle physics

A team of physicists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has discovered a hybrid particle that could pave the way for smaller and faster electronic devices in the future.

The hybrid particle, which was found to be a mashup of an electron and a phonon (a quasiparticle formed by vibrating atoms in a material), was detected in a strange, two-dimensional magnetic substance.

Probably the most intriguing aspect of the discovery, however, is that when the scientists measured the force between the electron and phonon, they saw that the glue, or bond, was 10 times stronger than what had previously been estimated for other known electron-phonon hybrids, according to the study which has been published in the journal Nature Communications.

Jan 12, 2022

Researchers create molecular device that can record and alter cells’ bioelectric fields without creating damage

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Bioelectricity, the current that flows between our cells, is fundamental to our ability to think and talk and walk.

In addition, there is a growing body of evidence that recording and altering the bioelectric fields of cells and tissue plays a vital role in and even potentially fighting diseases like cancer and heart disease.

Now, for the first time, researchers at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering have created a molecular device that can do both: Record and manipulate its surrounding bioelectric field.

Jan 12, 2022

Cannabis Compounds Prevented Covid Infection in Laboratory Study

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Cannabis compounds prevented the virus that causes Covid-19 from penetrating healthy human cells, according to a laboratory study published in the Journal of Nature Products.

Jan 12, 2022

Bio-inspired ceramic–metal composite stands its ground against cutting tools

Posted by in categories: energy, materials

Circa 2020


Harnessing the destructive potential of force and rotation, cutting tools like saws, drills, and angle grinders can obliterate the superlative properties that materials work so hard to perfect. And even when materials are designed to work against the power of these tools, the materials still often fail.

Continue reading “Bio-inspired ceramic–metal composite stands its ground against cutting tools” »

Jan 12, 2022

Current-Activated, Pressure-Assisted Infiltration: A Novel, Versatile Route for Producing Interpenetrating Ceramic–Metal Composites

Posted by in category: materials

Circa 2014


(2014). Current-Activated, Pressure-Assisted Infiltration: A Novel, Versatile Route for Producing Interpenetrating Ceramic–Metal Composites. Materials Research Letters: Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 124–130.

Jan 12, 2022

The Large Hadron Collider blips that could herald a new era of physics

Posted by in category: particle physics

Hints of a new particle carrying a fifth force of nature have been multiplying at the LHC – and many physicists are convinced this could finally be the big one.