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Dec 18, 2022

Dark matter: How the ESA’s tiny telescope will reveal more about this mystery

Posted by in category: cosmology

The European Space Agency recently announced a new mission of its science program: a small telescope orbiting the Earth dubbed Arrakhis.

The European Space Agency (ESA) recently announced a new mission of its science.


Amriphoto/iStock.

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Dec 18, 2022

How one small European country could hold the key to energy self-sufficiency

Posted by in categories: business, military, nuclear energy

The three major lessons on energy security.

On October 19, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen announced that the EU had replaced two-thirds of its Russian gas imports since February by switching to other suppliers. Such a turnaround seemed unattainable last spring when the invasion of Ukraine turned Moscow from an EU business partner into a military threat.


Despite the EU’s reduction of its energy dependence on Russia, there is work to be done in the long term. To achieve autonomy from Russian energy, the Union could learn from the experience of one of its members, Lithuania – a country which, since declaring its independence from the USSR in 1990, has been able to adapt to a complex geopolitical context to ensure its energy security.

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Dec 18, 2022

Space university: You can now learn about humanity’s star-bound future in college

Posted by in categories: education, space travel

This course equips students to see space exploration not only as rocket science but also as a topic for social science.

Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching.

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Dec 18, 2022

World-first: Drug molecules in the human body can now be manipulated

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

The innovation was inspired by the measles virus.

In a world-first, researchers at Tel Aviv University have conceived of a way to control the encapsulation and release of drug molecules by exposure to UV light, according to a press release by the institution published on Monday.

The scientists now hope that this new efficient encapsulation will allow for the high loading capacity of molecules leading to further development of delivery systems for the controlled release of biomolecules and drugs in the body by external stimuli using light.

Dec 18, 2022

Cyberthreats lurk at Messi vs. Mbappé FIFA World Cup final match as 5 billion prepare to watch

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, transportation

More than 15,000 cameras have been placed throughout the eight stadiums and along roads and transportation infrastructure in Doha.

As Lionel Messi faces Kylian Mbappé in Argentina vs France World Cup final match in Qatar, which billions prepare to watch, cybersecurity experts warn that the event may be a hotspot for cyber threats.

“With major sporting events becoming increasingly digitized, the attack surface for threat actors has also increased,” a recent ZeroFox report on World Cup threats stated.

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Dec 18, 2022

Are brain implants the future of computing?

Posted by in categories: computing, cyborgs, neuroscience, wearables

Imagine brain implants that let you control devices by thought alone—or let computers read your mind. It’s early days, but research into this technology is well under way.

Film supported by @mishcondereya.

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Dec 18, 2022

AI art: Death of creative industry, or its savior?

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, security

Check out all the on-demand sessions from the Intelligent Security Summit here.

With the arrival of AI-generated art and the proliferation of tools like Midjourney, Stable Diffusion and DALL-E, questions have been rife in circles across the creative industry.

Is this a temporary trend? Or a would-be essential tool in creative communication?

Dec 18, 2022

Communication Breakdown in the Brain

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Seizures come suddenly, triggered by stress, fever, flashing lights, or even just feeling tired. Some cause the body to jerk and shake while others can produce strange sensations, make one lose a sense of awareness, or faint. They can happen when the person is awake or asleep. When they pass, after a few seconds or minutes, they leave people tired, confused, and disoriented.

The brain usually maintains a certain level of inhibition that keeps neurons from firing uncontrollably. But during a seizure, one part of the brain starts firing too frantically and can’t stop, resulting in a spike of electrical activity and a seizure.

Dec 18, 2022

A New Way to Achieve Nuclear Fusion: Helion

Posted by in category: engineering

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Watch this video ad free on Nebula: https://nebula.tv/videos/realengineering-nuclear-fusion-is-changing-helion.

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Dec 18, 2022

The laws of physics don’t actually exist, according to this physicist

Posted by in categories: information science, mathematics, physics

The laws of physics do not exist, a theoretical physicist named Sankar Das Sarma argues in a new column published by New Scientist. While we define the laws as the “ultimate laws” of our universe, Sarma says they are merely working descriptions, and that they are nothing more than mathematical equations that match with parts of nature.