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Mar 11, 2021

Quantum Mechanics, the Chinese Room Experiment and the Limits of Understanding

Posted by in category: quantum physics

All of us, even physicists, often process information without really knowing what we’re doing.

Mar 10, 2021

China and Russia unveil joint plan for lunar space station

Posted by in category: space

Russia and China have unveiled plans for a joint lunar space station, with the Russian space agency Roscosmos saying it has signed an agreement with China’s National Space Administration (CNSA) to develop a “complex of experimental research facilities created on the surface and/or in the orbit of the moon”.

The CNSA, for its part, said the project was “open to all interested countries and international partners” in what experts said would be China’s biggest international space cooperation project to date.

Mar 10, 2021

Lander Vision Images

Posted by in category: futurism

You’re looking at the real deal images I used to make my pinpoint landing. This is how I quickly got my bearings and picked the safest target in the last three minutes before touchdown.

How it works: go.nasa.gov/3rBUbul

Mar 10, 2021

Physicists Measure the Gravitational Force between the Smallest Masses Yet

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

But Aspelmeyer and his colleagues could not declare victory quite yet: they still had to rule out the possibility that the source mass modulation was generating other forces on the test mass that would oscillate at precisely the same frequency. Periodic rocking of the table supporting the experimental apparatus, caused by recoil from the barely visible motion of the source mass, was just one of a host of confounders the researchers had to carefully quantify. In the end, they found that all known nongravitational forces would be at least 10 times smaller than the gravitational interaction.

Reaching toward Quantum Scales

Aspelmeyer believes that an improved torsion pendulum will be sensitive to gravity from masses 5000 times smaller still—lighter than a single eyelash. His ultimate goal is to experimentally test the quantum nature of gravity, a question that has perplexed physicists for nearly a century. Quantum mechanics is one of the most successful and precisely tested theories in all of science: it describes everything from the behavior of subatomic particles to the semiconductor physics that makes modern computing possible. But attempts to develop a quantum theory of gravity have repeatedly been stymied by contradictory and nonsensical predictions.

Mar 10, 2021

Plastic Polymer Cables That Rival Fiber Optics

Posted by in categories: computing, internet, sustainability

MIT scientists demonstrate a hair-like plastic polymer cable that can transmit data 10 times as fast as USB.


How fast does data flow? The answer: not fast enough.

The search for more efficient data-transfer solutions to meet the ever-increasing demand for computation never ends. Even today, most data transmission happens via traditional copper cables, which are power-hungry, leading to a compromise between data exchange and energy consumed. Fiber-optic cables are an alternative, but they don’t work well with the silicon chips in our computing systems. Overcoming these limitations, while theoretically possible, can turn out to be prohibitively expensive, especially for electronics-rich applications like data centers, spacecraft, electric vehicles and so on.

Continue reading “Plastic Polymer Cables That Rival Fiber Optics” »

Mar 10, 2021

Physicists have measured gravity on the smallest scale ever

Posted by in category: physics

The smallest-scale measurements of gravity ever made show that a tiny gold ball weighing 90 milligrams can move another gold ball just a few nanometres through gravitational pull.

Mar 10, 2021

Audio cassette tape inventor Lou Ottens dies aged 94

Posted by in categories: innovation, media & arts

The Dutch engineer’s invention transformed the way people listened to music in the 20th Century.

Mar 10, 2021

Successful trial shows way forward on quieter drone propellers

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI

Researchers have published a study revealing their successful approach to designing much quieter propellers.

The Australian research team used machine learning to design their propellers, then 3D printed several of the most promising prototypes for experimental acoustic testing at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation’s specialized ‘echo-free’ chamber.

Results now published in Aerospace Research Central show the prototypes made around 15dB less noise than commercially available propellers, validating the team’s design methodology.

Mar 10, 2021

Four new particles have been discovered, expanding our knowledge of the quantum universe!

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Mar 10, 2021

New Kind of Space Explosion Reveals the Birth of a Black Hole

Posted by in category: cosmology

A supernova-like explosion dubbed the Camel appears to be the result of a newborn black hole eating a star from the inside out.