Three thousand days and counting: NASA’s Curiosity rover continues its extraordinary exploration of Mars.
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Jan 11, 2021
Apple and Hyundai are reportedly planning to team up and build a ‘beta’ version of an electric car by 2022
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation
Hyundai and Apple teaming up to challenge Tesla? 😃
Apple and Hyundai plan to sign a deal that would lead to a “beta” version of an Apple electric vehicle as early as 2022, according to a Sunday report from Reuters.
Reuters cited a report from Korea IT News that said the companies are planning to sign a deal by March 2021 to partner on the self-driving electric cars, according to a Sunday report from Korea IT News.
Jan 11, 2021
NASA will soon fire up the most powerful rocket ever built
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space
This liquid fuel engine is a beast.
NASA plans to ignite an absolutely mammoth rocket on Jan. 17, the largest it’s built since the Apollo program.
Jan 11, 2021
China to begin construction of space station this year
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: satellites
Like.
The core section of China’s space station is scheduled to launch in the next several months, the first of 11 missions carrying lab elements, cargo, and astronauts to the fledgling outpost over the next two years, according to Chinese space program officials.
The launch of the first element of the Chinese station is one of more than 40 missions scheduled this year by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp., or CASC, China’s largest state-owned aerospace contractor.
Continue reading “China to begin construction of space station this year” »
Jan 10, 2021
Scientists Discover a New Type of Chemical Bond, And It’s Surprisingly Strong
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: chemistry, particle physics
Scientists have recently discovered a totally new type of chemical bond – and it’s way stronger than it has any right to be.
The new type of bond shows that the divide between powerful covalent bonds, which bind molecules together, and weak hydrogen bonds, which form between molecules and can be broken by something as simple as stirring salt into a glass of water, isn’t as clear as chemistry textbooks would suggest.
Think back to that high-school chemistry class, and you’ll remember that there are different types of bonds that link atoms together into molecules and crystal structures.
Jan 10, 2021
Gene Therapies and the Promise of the Fountain of Youth
Posted by John Davies in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, life extension
Gene therapies are opening up possibilities that were once reserved for science fiction.
At Harvard University, Professor of Genetics David Sinclair says he believes it’s possible to unlock the fountain of youth, and gene therapy is the key.
Continue reading “Gene Therapies and the Promise of the Fountain of Youth” »
Jan 10, 2021
Atoms of Space and Time
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
Circa 2006
We perceive space and time to be continuous, but if the amazing theory of loop quantum gravity is correct, they actually come in discrete pieces.
Jan 10, 2021
2 Ohio men say they encountered Bigfoot-like creature at Salt Fork State Park
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: futurism
It was just a leisurely walk in the woods — one they’ve done many times — but this time was different. This time, they spotted something that they say they’ll never forget.
It was Jan. 12 when two Ohio men found themselves staring at what they say resembled Bigfoot or Sasquatch in Salt Fork State Park.
Continue reading “2 Ohio men say they encountered Bigfoot-like creature at Salt Fork State Park” »
Jan 10, 2021
Update on the Green Run Hot Fire Test for Artemis I on This Week @NASA – 1/8/21
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space
Jan 10, 2021
Noncognitive Skills, Distinct From Cognitive Abilities, Are Important to Success Across the Life
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: education, genetics, neuroscience
Summary: The genetics of neurocognitive skills were associated with higher tolerance of risk, delayed fertility, less healthy-risk behavior, and a greater willingness to forgo immediate gratification.
Source: Columbia University.
Noncognitive skills and cognitive abilities are both important contributors to educational attainment — the number of years of formal schooling that a person completes — and lead to success across the life course, according to a new study from an international team led by researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, the University of Texas at Austin, and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.