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May 13, 2023

Rare fossils fill a gap in the evolution of major animal groups

Posted by in categories: evolution, food, particle physics

Exceptionally well-preserved fossils from the Cambrian period have helped fill a gap in our understanding of the origin and evolution of major animal groups alive today.

A new analysis of fossils belonging to an extinct invertebrate called Rotadiscus grandis have helped place this species in the animal tree of life, revealing how some characteristics of living species may have evolved independently rather than originating in a single common ancestor.

Half a billion years ago, an unusual-looking animal crawled over the sea floor, using tentacles to pick up food particles along the way.

May 13, 2023

Scientists in Australia discover new deepwater shark species with unique eyes, egg cases

Posted by in category: futurism

The shark’s spooky white eyes and egg pouch set it apart from nearly all other shark species, scientists say.

May 13, 2023

One Giant Leap for Brand Kind

Posted by in category: space travel

https://youtube.com/watch?v=q49UdKvoj8I

Companies are sending their products into orbit and plastering their logos on spacecraft. Will space ads dull our sense of wonder about the universe?

May 13, 2023

The Graphene Era: 200x Stronger Than Steel, 5x Lighter Than Aluminum And The Best Conductivity Of Any Material

Posted by in categories: innovation, materials

Graphene, by all metrics, is a revolutionary material producing some unbelievable results. Avadain has developed a patented breakthrough technology for producing industrial volumes of large, thin, and nearly defect-free graphene flakes, addressing the $100B market demand for this revolutionary material.

May 13, 2023

Researchers Reveal the ‘Pangenome,’ a More Diverse Look at Human DNA

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

The new version of the human genome could lead to better diagnostics and treatment of genetic diseases.

May 13, 2023

Axiom Space gears up for second private human spaceflight mission to ISS

Posted by in category: space travel

Axiom Space’s second private crewed mission to the International Space Station is now scheduled to launch in just ten days, with the four-person crew preparing to conduct more than 20 scientific experiments while in space.

The Ax-2 mission will now launch no earlier than 5:37 p.m. EDT on May 21 from SpaceX’s Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. The crew will travel to the station onboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon capsule, where they’ll remain for a roughly 10-day stint. This will mark the second fully private crew to visit the ISS; the first mission, also operated by Axiom Space, took place in April 2022.

The crew includes Peggy Whitson, the mission commander and Axiom’s director of human spaceflight; John Shoffner, the pilot; Ali Alqarni, mission specialist; and Rayyanah Barnawi, also a mission specialist. Alqarni and Barnawi are both members of Saudi Arabia’s first astronaut class and will be the first people from that country to visit the ISS. Shoffner, an Axiom investor, is the only paying customer on the crew.

May 13, 2023

Elon Musk Buys Ten Thousand GPUs for Secretive AI Project

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, finance, robotics/AI

Twitter CEO Elon Musk has bought around 10,000 graphics cards and is hiring AI experts to build a ChatGPT competitor within Twitter, Insider reports.

That’s despite the billionaire CEO repeatedly voicing concerns over AI chatbots like ChatGPT, and even signing an open letter calling for a six-month moratorium on developing AIs more advanced than OpenAI’s GPT-4.

Training a large language model like OpenAI’s highly popular AI chatbot takes a lot of computational power, which means Musk had to dig deep in his sizeable pockets — tens of millions of dollars, according to Insider — to finance the project.

May 13, 2023

‘Runaway black hole,’ or sneaky galaxy in disguise? Experts are conflicted

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

The object’s gravity and velocity, the study suggested, would have ignited the gas and left a blazing trail of stars in its wake. This exciting discovery would mark the first observation of a rogue supermassive black hole — objects that are theorized to roam the universe after being ejected from their host galaxy, possibly due to collisions with other black holes.

Now, new research hints at a more mundane explanation.

The new study, published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics (opens in new tab), suggests that the weirdly thin streak might simply be a flat galaxy viewed on its edge, like the rim of a plate. Unlike the Milky Way, this supposed galaxy would not have a bulge of stars at its center but would be totally flat — a relatively common type of galaxy called a thin or flat galaxy.

May 13, 2023

Black hole shreds star in a cosmic feeding frenzy that has astronomers thrilled

Posted by in category: cosmology

Lurking in the darkness of space, black holes are notorious for shredding stars that venture too close, and then gobbling them up. But astronomers have had only a rudimentary understanding of that dramatic process.

A new study sheds some light. Astronomers have spotted streams of star matter that came full circle around black holes and bumped into themselves. Such collisions were long theorized, but the new observations for the first time provide a direct look at the early stages of disk-forming around black holes.

May 13, 2023

Hydromea Wireless Underwater Drones

Posted by in categories: drones, economics, robotics/AI, space, sustainability

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fAIIzWOEvk

The Hydromea Exray wireless drone is an underwater drone that uses optics instead of cables for many effortless applications.


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