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Sep 4, 2019

A biocompatible magnetic skin that could enable new wearable systems

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, wearables

Researchers at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology have recently developed a flexible and imperceptible magnetic skin that adds permanent magnetic properties to all surfaces to which it is applied. This artificial skin, presented in a paper published in Wiley’s Advanced Materials Technologies journal, could have numerous interesting applications. For instance, it could enable the development of more effective tools to aid people with disabilities, help biomedical professionals to monitor their patients’ vital signs, and pave the way for new consumer tech.

“Artificial skins are all about extending our senses or abilities,” Adbullah Almansouri, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told TechXplore. “A great challenge in their development, however, is that they should be imperceptible and comfortable to wear. This is very difficult to achieve reliably and durably, if we need stretchable electronics, batteries, substrates, antennas, sensors, wires, etc. We decided to remove all these delicate components from the skin itself and place them in a comfortable nearby location (i.e., inside of eye glasses or hidden in a fabric).”

The , developed under the supervision of Prof. Jürgen Kosel, is magnetic, thin and highly flexible. When it is worn by a human user, it can be easily tracked by a nearby magnetic sensor. For instance, if a user wears it on his eyelid, it allows for his to be tracked; if worn on fingers, it can help to monitor a person’s physiological responses or even to control switches without touching them.

Sep 4, 2019

(PDF) Nikola Tesla’s Free Electricity Electronic Circuit

Posted by in category: energy

Nikola Tesla was an inventor who is best known for his contributions for the design for generating alternating current, Electricity supply system etc. He obtained around three hundred patents worldwide for his inventions and some are hidden in patent archives. One of the…

Sep 4, 2019

List of Tesla patents

Posted by in category: futurism

Under construction.

Sep 4, 2019

Nikola tesla

Posted by in category: futurism

Nikola tesla patents I think they filtered it though.


Search and read the full text of patents from around the world with Google Patents, and find prior art in our index of non-patent literature.

Sep 4, 2019

How DARPA’s Twitter Account Leans Into Its Mad-Scientist Reputation

Posted by in category: military

When the secretive military technology agency asked for help finding an underground tunnel system for “experimentation,” Twitter went wild.

Sep 4, 2019

Overnight changes in Mars’ atmosphere could solve a methane mystery

Posted by in category: space

Overnight atmospheric changes on Mars can explain why two spacecraft measure vastly different concentrations of methane.

Sep 4, 2019

ESA Spacecraft Sidesteps Collision With SpaceX Satellite

Posted by in categories: military, satellites

According to media reports, SpaceX refused to move its satellite even after it was alerted by the US military, which monitors space traffic.

ESA Spacecraft Sidesteps Collision With SpaceX Satellite

Sep 4, 2019

AgeX Discussion of Aging and Regeneration

Posted by in category: life extension

Click on photo to start video.

AgeX CEO Dr. Michael West discusses the technology behind cell aging reversal described in the publication “Toward a Unified Theory of Aging and Regeneration.”

Sep 4, 2019

Asteroid bombshell: Scientists stunned

Posted by in category: space

SCIENTISTS have been left left stunned by new, incredibly high-resolution images of one of the oldest objects in the solar system.

Sep 4, 2019

Study reveals ‘radical’ wrinkle in forming complex carbon molecules in space

Posted by in categories: chemistry, nanotechnology, space travel

A team of scientists has discovered a new possible pathway toward forming carbon structures in space using a specialized chemical exploration technique at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).

The team’s research has now identified several avenues by which ringed molecules known as , or PAHs, can form in space. The latest study is a part of an ongoing effort to retrace the chemical steps leading to the formation of complex carbon-containing molecules in deep space.

PAHs—which also occur on Earth in emissions and soot from the combustion of fossil fuels—could provide clues to the formation of life’s chemistry in space as precursors to interstellar nanoparticles. They are estimated to account for about 20 percent of all carbon in our galaxy, and they have the chemical building blocks needed to form 2-D and 3D carbon structures.