A container full of translucent liquid spins while a laser is used to harden the liquid to form a high-precision object.
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Jan 5, 2021
Venezuela’s Maduro Plans Shift to Fully Digitalized Economy
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: economics, finance, government
Venezuela’s government is planning to move to a fully digital economy as hyperinflation has made worthless bolivar notes practically disappear, and dollarization expands through the local financial system.
The U.S. dollar has operated as an escape valve for Venezuela amid U.S. sanctions and collapsing oil revenues, President Nicolas Maduro said in a televised interview with Telesur on Friday. He said 18.6% of all commercial transactions are in dollars, while 77.3% are carried out in bolivars with debit cards. Only 3.4% are paid with bolivar notes.
“They have a war against our physical currency. We are moving this year to a more profound digital economy, in expansion. I’ve set the goal of an economy that’s 100% digital,” Maduro said, adding that physical money will eventually disappear.
# Gravitas | Three spacecraft are on their way to find life on Mars. UAE’s ‘Hope Orbiter’, NASA’s ‘Perseverance’ rover & China’s ‘Tianwen-1’ mission. Which one will be the first to arrive? Palki S Upadhyay gets you a report.
Jan 5, 2021
A Million-Mile Battery From China Could Power Your Electric Car
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: sustainability, transportation
The Chinese behemoth that makes electric-car batteries for Tesla Inc. and Volkswagen AG developed a power pack that lasts more than a million miles — an industry landmark and a potential boon for automakers trying to sway drivers to their EV models.
Jan 5, 2021
Researchers report new state of matter described as ‘liquid glass’
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biological, chemistry, physics
Discovery of liquid glass sheds light on the old scientific problem of the glass transition: An interdisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Konstanz has uncovered a new state of matter, liquid glass, with previously unknown structural elements—new insights into the nature of glass and its transitions.
While glass is a truly ubiquitous material that we use on a daily basis, it also represents a major scientific conundrum. Contrary to what one might expect, the true nature of glass remains something of a mystery, with scientific inquiry into its chemical and physical properties still underway. In chemistry and physics, the term glass itself is a mutable concept: It includes the substance we know as window glass, but it may also refer to a range of other materials with properties that can be explained by reference to glass-like behavior, including, for instance, metals, plastics, proteins, and even biological cells.
While it may give the impression, glass is anything but conventionally solid. Typically, when a material transitions from a liquid to a solid state the molecules line up to form a crystal pattern. In glass, this does not happen. Instead, the molecules are effectively frozen in place before crystallization happens. This strange and disordered state is characteristic of glasses across different systems and scientists are still trying to understand how exactly this metastable state forms.
Jan 5, 2021
A 3D Printed Apartment Building Is Going Up in Germany
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: habitats
OEC promoting 3D printing technology in Africa.
When completed the building will have five separate apartments and a total square footage of 4090. The 3D printed apartments will rent at market rates.
Continue reading “A 3D Printed Apartment Building Is Going Up in Germany” »
By Hubble Resembles Reputed “Planet Nine” in Our Solar System.
Astronomers confirm bound orbit for planet far from its star, showing that far-flung planets exist.
Astronomers are still searching for a hypothetical “Planet Nine” in the distant reaches of our solar system, but an exoplanet 336 light years from Earth is looking more and more like the Planet Nine of its star system.
Jan 5, 2021
Study of 50,000 people finds brown fat may protect against numerous chronic diseases
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biotech/medical, food, health
Brown fat is that magical tissue that you would want more of. Unlike white fat, which stores calories, brown fat burns energy and scientists hope it may hold the key to new obesity treatments. But it has long been unclear whether people with ample brown fat truly enjoy better health. For one thing, it has been hard to even identify such individuals since brown fat is hidden deep inside the body.
Now, a new study in Nature Medicine offers strong evidence: among over 52000 participants, those who had detectable brown fat were less likely than their peers to suffer cardiac and metabolic conditions ranging from type 2 diabetes to coronary artery disease, which is the leading cause of death in the United States.
The study, by far the largest of its kind in humans, confirms and expands the health benefits of brown fat suggested by previous studies. “For the first time, it reveals a link to lower risk of certain conditions,” says Paul Cohen, the Albert Resnick, M.D., Assistant Professor and senior attending physician at The Rockefeller University Hospital. “These findings make us more confident about the potential of targeting brown fat for therapeutic benefit.”
Jan 5, 2021
Alien Puzzle Boxes: Twenty short science fiction stories
Posted by Jeremy Lichtman in category: futurism
Posting with Eric Klien.
My anthology of short science fiction stories is free for Kindle download until Friday.
Alien Puzzle Boxes: Twenty short science fiction stories eBook: Lichtman, Jeremy: Amazon.ca: Kindle Store.
Jan 5, 2021
The thorium-powered car: Eight grams, one million miles
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: nuclear energy, transportation
A US company says it will have a nuclear-powered prototype vehicle on the road within two years.
Laser Power Systems from Connecticut is developing a method of propulsion that uses thorium to produce electricity to power a car engine.
Thorium is an element similar to uranium and because it is such a dense material it has the potential to produce massive amounts of heat.
Continue reading “The thorium-powered car: Eight grams, one million miles” »