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Mar 7, 2023

SPACE FORCE: The Secret Orbit — Arms Race in Space | SpaceTime — WELT Documentary

Posted by in categories: military, satellites

In December 2019, the United States established its new space force: the United States Space Force. A logical step in a globalized and digitized world whose infrastructure depends on satellites in space. This infrastructure is under threat. Also by a resurgence of conflict between East and West. This episode of Spacetime describes how the military conquered space and why the world is in a new arms race in Earth orbit.

#documentary #spacetime #usa.

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Mar 7, 2023

Open source software could deliver huge time savings for computational chemists

Posted by in categories: chemistry, robotics/AI

A new program can streamline the process of creating, launching and analysing computational chemistry experiments. This piece of software, called AQME, is distributed for free under an open source licence, and could contribute to making calculations more efficient, as well as accelerating automated analyses.

‘We estimate time savings of around 70% in routine computational chemistry protocols,’ explains lead author Juan Vicente Alegre Requena, at the Institute of Chemical Synthesis and Homogeneous Catalysis (ISQCH) in Zaragoza, Spain. ‘In modern molecular simulations, studying a single reaction usually involves more than 500 calculations,’ he explains. ‘Generating all the input files, launching the calculations and analysing the results requires an extraordinary amount of time, especially when unexpected errors appear.’

Therefore, Alegre and his colleagues decided to code a piece of software to skip several steps and streamline calculations. Among other advantages, AQME works with simple inputs, instead of the optimised 3D chemical structures usually required by other solutions. ‘It’s exceptionally easy,’ says Alegre. ‘AQME is installed in a couple of minutes, then the only indispensable input is as a simple Smiles string.’ Smiles is a system developed by chemist and coder Dave Weininger in the late 1980s, which converts complex chemical structures into a succession of letters and numbers that is machine readable. This cross-compatibility could allow integration with chemical databases and machine-learning solutions, most of which include datasets in Smiles format, explains Alegre.

Mar 7, 2023

The mushrooms you can wear and build with

Posted by in category: materials

A growing number of firms are turning fungi roots into clothing and building material.

Mar 7, 2023

Dr. Moupali Das, MD, MPH — Gilead Sciences — Dedicated To Ending The HIV Epidemic

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, health, policy

Dedicated to ending the HIV epidemic — dr. moupali das, MD, MPH, executive director, HIV clinical research, gilead sciences.


Dr. Moupali Das, MD, MPH, is Executive Director, HIV Clinical Research, in the Virology Therapeutic Area, at Gilead Sciences (https://www.gilead.com/), where she leads the pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) clinical drug development program, including evaluating the safety and efficacy of a long-acting, twice yearly, subcutaneous injection being studied for HIV prevention. Her responsibilities also include expanding the populations who may benefit from PrEP.

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Mar 7, 2023

NASA shares breathtaking aurora video from space station

Posted by in category: space

NASA has released a breathtaking time-lapse video captured from the International Space Station showing a recent aurora over Earth.

Mar 7, 2023

Scientists found a dinosaur with skin on its face still intact

Posted by in category: futurism

Scientists have made a freak discovery that’s potentially brought us closer to dinosaurs than we’ve ever been before.

Archaeologists uncovered one of the most well-preserved dinosaur fossils — so preserved that its very skin was still intact after all these years.

Talk about a good skincare routine, the discovery is now being hailed as a ‘one-in-a-billion’ find.

Mar 7, 2023

Fred Hoyle: “I don’t believe in the Big Bang”

Posted by in category: cosmology

Sir Fred Hoyle was an English astronomer who formulated the theory of stellar nucleosynthesis. He also held controversial stances on other scientific matters — in particular his rejection of the “Big Bang” theory, a term coined by him on BBC radio, and his promotion of panspermia and the Steady-state theory of the universe.

Mar 7, 2023

Huge young galaxies seen

Posted by in category: space

Galaxies spotted by the James Webb Space Telescope seem far too massive to have formed so early on in the universe’s history, which could be a problem for our ideas of galaxy formation.

By Leah Crane and Alex Wilkins.

Mar 7, 2023

Sean Carroll: Spacetime emerging from entanglement

Posted by in category: futurism

Mar 7, 2023

Quantum Physics: Scientists Cool Nanoparticles to Ground-State in 2D Motion

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, quantum physics

Experts consider glass nanoparticles kept inside extreme vacuum layers as potential platforms for examining the quantum world’s limits. However, a question in the field of quantum theory remains unanswered: at which size does an object start being described by quantum physics laws rather than classical physics laws?

Achieving Quantum-State Cooling in More Than One Direction Is Challenging

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