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Apr 18, 2020

The Navy’s Smallest Warship Gets a Big Laser Gun

Posted by in categories: drones, military

One of the U.S. Navy’s newest and smallest warships is the latest to receive a laser weapon system. The USS Little Rock, which made the news last year after being trapped in Canada by ice, will get a laser during an upcoming deployment sometime this year. The laser is one of the most powerful military lasers yet and should give it the ability to damage or destroy small boats, drones, and aircraft.

According to U.S. Naval Institute News, defense contractor General Dynamics will install a 150 kilowatt laser weapon system aboard the littoral combat ship USS Little Rock. The ship is based in Mayport, Florida and will likely join the Navy’s 4th Fleet, responsible for Central and South America.

Apr 18, 2020

Assessing Israel’s tactical laser breakthrough

Posted by in category: innovation

Brig. Gen. Yaniv Rotem at the Israeli Defense Ministry forecast that Israel will demonstrate the laser capabilities in the field this year. To be clear, Rotem appears to be referring to a demonstrator and not a fielded system. Regardless, this timeline may prove challenging. While the development represents a significant R&D milestone, it is important to understand the technology’s promise — as well as its limitations.

Apr 18, 2020

The Navy Will Put a Laser Gun on a Destroyer by 2021

Posted by in categories: drones, military, robotics/AI, surveillance

Pew-pew-pew is coming soon-soon-soon.

The U.S. Navy plans to put a laser weapon on a warship by 2021. The High Energy Laser with Integrated Optical-dazzler and Surveillance (HELIOS) system, or HELIOS, is a defensive weapon system designed to burn boats and shoot down unmanned drones. The weapon will go to sea with a guided missile destroyer assigned to the Pacific Fleet in two years’ time, the Navy says.

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Apr 18, 2020

The U.S. Army Plans To Field the Most Powerful Laser Weapon Yet

Posted by in categories: energy, military

O,.o woah o.o


The U.S. Army is pushing forward with plans for the most powerful laser weapon to date. The Indirect Fires Protection Capability-High Energy Laser (IFPC-HEL) will be a 250 to 300 kilowatt weapon, up to 10 times more powerful than the U.S. Navy’s Laser Weapon System. The power boost should be enough to destroy targets as large as incoming cruise missiles.

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Apr 18, 2020

Parker Solar Probe Becomes Fastest-Ever Spacecraft

Posted by in category: space

:oooo.


At about 10:54 p.m. EDT, Parker Solar Probe surpassed 153,454 miles per hour — as calculated by the mission team — making it the fastest-ever human-made object relative to the Sun. This breaks the record set by the German-American Helios 2 mission in April 1976.

Parker Solar Probe will repeatedly break its own records, achieving a top speed of about 430,000 miles per hour in 2024.

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Apr 18, 2020

Stan Lee Superhumans Electric Man

Posted by in category: futurism

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIRMqG5B4iE&feature=youtu.be

Copyright by Super Humans:

http://www.history.com/shows/stan-lees-superhumans

Apr 18, 2020

Army Ramps Up Funding For Laser Shield, Hypersonic Sword

Posted by in category: military

Research and development spending on hypersonics will nearly double in ‘21, and it will triple for lasers, as the service rushes to deploy combat-ready prototypes.

Apr 18, 2020

Israel, US researchers create ‘mini Human-on-a-Chip’ to speed up drug testing

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, computing, neuroscience

Two new studies by researchers in Tel Aviv University and Harvard University on the subject were published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering on Monday.

Organs-on-a-chip were first developed in 2010 at Harvard University. Then, scientists took cells from a specific human organ — heart, brain, kidney and lung — and used tissue engineering techniques to put them in a plastic cartridge, or the so called chip. Despite the use of the term chip, which often refers to microchips, no computer parts are involved here.

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Apr 18, 2020

Genetic tracing ‘barcode’ is rapidly revealing COVID-19’s journey and evolution

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Drexel University researchers have reported a method to quickly identify and label mutated versions of the virus that causes COVID-19. Their preliminary analysis, using information from a global database of genetic information gleaned from coronavirus testing, suggests that there are at least six to 10 slightly different versions of the virus infecting people in America, some of which are either the same as, or have subsequently evolved from, strains directly from Asia, while others are the same as those found in Europe.

First developed as a way of parsing to get a snapshot of the mix of bacteria, the genetic analysis tool teases out patterns from volumes of genetic information and can identify whether a virus has genetically changed. They can then use the pattern to categorize viruses with using tags called Informative Subtype Markers (ISM).

Applying the same method to process viral genetic data can quickly detect and categorize slight genetic variations in the SARS-CoV-2, the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19, the group reported in a paper recently posted on the preliminary research archive, bioRxiv. The genetic analysis tool that generates these labels is publicly available for COVID-19 researchers on GitHub.

Apr 18, 2020

How does coronavirus kill? Clinicians trace a ferocious rampage through the body, from brain to toes

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

The lungs are ground zero for COVID-19, but blood clots may play a surprisingly big role in severe illness.