Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 896
Jan 29, 2018
‘Robotic Habitats’ imagines a self-sustaining AI ecosystem
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: habitats, robotics/AI, space
As artificial intelligence advances at an unprecedented pace, we tend to see its arrival in emotional terms — usually, either excitement or fear. But Noumena, a collective of designers, engineers and architects, is looking at AI and robots more practically. What form will they take, how will they survive and develop, and where will they live? It aims to explore those idea with an exhibition entitled “Robotic Habitats.”
Noumena’s project assumes that deep learning systems will grow out of their narrow Go-playing abilities and soon match humans at many, if not most, tasks. While that would put them on par with us, it doesn’t mean they would live the same way, though. “Society will need to develop a framework for both to thrive,” explains Neumena on its website. “A new form of artificial life will emerge, finding space at the peripheries of humanity in order to not compete for human-dominated resources.”
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Jan 27, 2018
On the Origin of the Asteroid Belts and the Dwarf Planets: Towards a New Horizon in Astronomy
Posted by Johan Nygren in category: space
A few ideas I had, feel free to review and shoot down on them if you think they suck.
Ceres as Jupiters’ old moon.
Jan 27, 2018
A new model for planet formation: Solar ejections
Posted by Johan Nygren in category: space
A model that ties together disparate ideas in astronomy from the past centuries.
Expansion tectonics and a new model for planet-formation.
Jan 27, 2018
Microbes may help feed astronauts on future deep-space missions
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: biological, food, space
Food for astronauts during future deep-space missions may be produced from their own waste, a new study suggests.
Jan 26, 2018
Chinese volunteers spend 200 days on virtual ‘moon base’
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
Chinese students spent 200 continuous days in a “lunar lab” in Beijing, state media said Friday, as the country prepares for its long-term goal of putting people on the moon.
Four students crammed into a 160-square-metre (1,720-square-foot) cabin called “Yuegong-1”—Lunar Palace—on the campus of Beihang University, testing the limits of humans’ ability to live in a self-contained space, the official Xinhua news agency said.
The volunteers lived in the sealed lab to simulate a long-term space mission with no input from the outside world.
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Jan 25, 2018
Scientists building world’s most-powerful ‘SUPER LASERS’ that can RIP holes in space
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
Jan 25, 2018
Noumena’s Robotic Habitats Questions The Evolution of Artificial Intelligence
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: habitats, mapping, robotics/AI, space
for the 2017 tallinn architecture biennale, noumena has presented its installation based on the future of robots and its adaptability with the environment. deep learning has paved the way for machines to expand beyond narrow capabilities to soon achieving human-level performance on intellectual tasks. however, as artificial intelligence — A.I. — establishes its place within humans, society will need to develop a framework for both to thrive. a new form of artificial life will emerge, finding space at the peripheries of humanity in order to not compete for human-dominated resources. A.I. will attempt to improve its operating surroundings to not just survive but be self-sustaining, forming the basis of a civilization constrained at the intersection of nature and technology.
image © tõnu tunnel.
barcelonian based practice noumena has developed a framework to build this narrative based on the cross disciplinary intersection of computational design, mechanical and electronic design, rapid prototyping interaction and mapping. nowadays, computing tools as well as rapid prototyping machines allow to have a quick practical feedback on design solutions and to iterate experimenting different possibility at the same time giving the chance to choose and custom a functional part.
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Jan 24, 2018
See why NASA is calling next week’s supermoon ‘extra special’
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
Jan 24, 2018
Better than holograms: A new 3D projection into thin air
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: holograms, particle physics, space
One of the enduring sci-fi moments of the big screen—R2-D2 beaming a 3D image of Princess Leia into thin air in “Star Wars”—is closer to reality thanks to the smallest of screens: dust-like particles.
Scientists have figured out how to manipulate nearly unseen specks in the air and use them to create 3D images that are more realistic and clearer than holograms, according to a study in Wednesday’s journal Nature. The study’s lead author, Daniel Smalley, said the new technology is “printing something in space, just erasing it very quickly.”
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