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Apr 16, 2020

The Sun Is Spitting Out Strange Patterns of Gamma Rays—and No One Knows Why

Posted by in categories: climatology, particle physics, satellites, sustainability

Scientists have studied this ebb and flow for centuries, but only began understanding its effects on our planet at the dawn of the space age in the mid-20th century. Now it is clear that around solar maximum the sun is more likely to bombard Earth with charged particles that damage satellites and power grids. The solar cycle also plays a minor role in climate, as variations in irradiance can cause slight changes in average sea-surface temperatures and precipitation patterns. Thus, a better understanding of the cycle’s physical drivers is important for sustainable living on Earth.

Yet scientists still lack a model that perfectly predicts the cycle’s key details, such as the exact duration and strength of each phase. “I think the solar cycle is so stable and clear that there is something fundamental that we are missing,” says Ofer Cohen, a solar physicist at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. One obstacle to figuring it out, he says, is that crucial details of the apparent mechanisms behind the cycle—such as the sun’s magnetic field—are largely hidden from our view. But that might be about to change.

Tim Linden, an astronomer at The Ohio State University, and his colleagues recently mapped how the sun’s high-energy glow dances across its face over time. They found a potential link between these high-energy emissions, the sun’s fluctuating magnetic field and the timing of the solar cycle. This, many experts argue, could open a new window into the inner workings of our nearest, most familiar star.

Apr 16, 2020

Maico Rivero added a new photo

Posted by in category: futurism

Interior | exterior | posterior. Arq and art/deco https://instagram.com/teaaalexis?igshid=1xt6gzudk4gbo

Apr 16, 2020

New Earth-sized planet found in habitable sweet-spot orbit around a distant star

Posted by in categories: alien life, information science

Researchers have discovered a new Earth-sized planet orbiting a star outside our solar system. The planet, called Kepler-1649c, is only around 1.06 times larger than Earth, making it very similar to our own planet in terms of physical dimensions. It’s also quite close to its star, orbiting at a distance that means it gets around 75% of the light we do from the Sun.

The planet’s star is a red dwarf, which is more prone to the kind of flares that might make it difficult for life to have evolved on its rocky satellite’s surface, unlike here in our own neighborhood. It orbits so closely to its star, too, that one year is just 19.5 of our days — but the star puts out significantly less heat than the Sun, so that’s actually right in the proper region to allow for the presence of liquid water.

Kepler-1649c was found by scientists digging into existing observations gathered by the Kepler space telescope before its retirement from operational status in 2018. An algorithm that was developed to go through the troves of data collected by the telescope and identify potential planets for further study failed to properly ID this one, but researchers noticed it when reviewing the information.

Apr 16, 2020

Headset-Free Augmented Reality

Posted by in category: augmented reality

Look no further. Now you can experience AR without a headset.

Apr 16, 2020

This is a hoverboard for golfers

Posted by in category: transportation

Click on photo to start video.

GolfBoard is a hoverboard for the golf course.

Apr 16, 2020

Robot painters

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

These industrial robots are impeccable portrait painters.

Apr 16, 2020

Research sheds light on how silver ions kill bacteria

Posted by in category: particle physics

The antimicrobial properties of silver have been known for centuries. While it is still a mystery as to exactly how silver kills bacteria, University of Arkansas researchers have taken a step toward better understanding the process by looking at dynamics of proteins in live bacteria at the molecular level.

Traditionally, the antimicrobial effects of silver have been measured through bioassays, which compare the effect of a substance on a test organism against a standard, untreated preparation. While these methods are effective, they typically produce only snapshots in time, said Yong Wang, assistant professor of physics and an author of the study, published in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.

Instead, Wang and his colleagues used an advanced imaging technique, called “single-particle-tracking photoactivated localization microscopy,” to watch and track a particular found in E. coli bacteria over time.

Apr 16, 2020

Scientists studied ancient Romans and found that they had perfect teeth

Posted by in category: futurism

Scientists say ancient Romans had perfect teeth because of their low-sugar diets.

Apr 16, 2020

Rocket Lab proves it can recover a rocket in mid-air

Posted by in category: space travel

Last year, Rocket Lab announced that it would attempt to reuse the first stage of its Electron rocket. The company’s goal is to catch the stage as it falls back towards the ocean by plucking it out of mid-air with a helicopter. While that’s ambitious, a video released today shows that Rocket Lab may not be too far off. The clip shows one helicopter dropping an Electron test stage and another hooking the stage’s parachute with a grappling hook and towing it back to land.

Rocket Lab pulled off this stunt in early March. One helicopter dropped the Electron test stage over open ocean in New Zealand. A second helicopter caught it, on the first attempt, at around 5,000 feet.

Apr 16, 2020

ICON 3D-printing for the homeless in Austin

Posted by in category: 3D printing

Thanks to 3D-printing, 25,000 homeless people in Texas have somewhere to live.