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Jul 20, 2024

Signs of two gases in clouds of Venus could indicate life, scientists say

Posted by in category: space

Separate teams find evidence of phosphine and ammonia, potential biomarkers on planet whose surface reaches 450C.

Jul 20, 2024

New incompletely rifted microcontinent identified between Greenland and Canada

Posted by in category: climatology

Plate tectonics are the driving force behind Earth’s continental configurations, with the lithosphere (oceanic and continental crusts and upper mantle) moving due to convection processes occurring in the softer underlying asthenospheric mantle. Many earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and mountain formations are direct consequences of the movements of these globe-spanning plates, particularly at their margins.

Jul 20, 2024

New tractor beam technology could one day minimize biopsy trauma

Posted by in categories: particle physics, tractor beam

Researchers at TMOS, the ARC Center of Excellence for Transformative Meta-Optical Systems, have taken an important first step in the development of metasurface-enabled tractor beams—rays of light that can pull particles toward it, a concept that fictional tractor beams featured in science fiction are based on.

Jul 20, 2024

AI-powered optical detection to thwart counterfeit chips

Posted by in categories: finance, quantum physics, robotics/AI, security, surveillance

The semiconductor industry has grown into a $500 billion global market over the last 60 years. However, it is grappling with dual challenges: a profound shortage of new chips and a surge of counterfeit chips, introducing substantial risks of malfunction and unwanted surveillance. In particular, the latter inadvertently gives rise to a $75 billion counterfeit chip market that jeopardizes safety and security across multiple sectors dependent on semiconductor technologies, such as aviation, communications, quantum, artificial intelligence, and personal finance.

Jul 20, 2024

Results suggests titanium-48’s nuclear structure changes when observed at varying distances

Posted by in category: particle physics

The world around us is made up of particles invisible to the naked eye, but physicists continue to gain insights into this mysterious realm. Findings published in Physical Review C by Osaka Metropolitan University researchers show that the nuclear structure of an atom likely changes depending on the distance the protons and neutrons are from the center of the nucleus.

Jul 20, 2024

A new way to control the magnetic properties of rare earth elements

Posted by in category: materials

The special properties of rare earth magnetic materials are due to the electrons in the 4f shell. Until now, the magnetic properties of 4f electrons were considered almost impossible to control.

Jul 20, 2024

A 13.3bn years old oxygen signal indicates a star formed just 250 million years after the Big Bang

Posted by in category: cosmology

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is not your typical telescope. Instead, ALMA, located in northern Chile’s high-and-dry Atacama Desert, is a radio telescope comprised of 66 high-precision antennas that work in perfect harmony. When ALMA’s antennas (which range in diameter from 7 to 12 meters) are deployed in various ways, the array may zoom in on some of the universe’s most distant cosmic objects while also recording images crisper than those generated by the Hubble Space Telescope.

First starlight

In a research published in the journal Nature, an international team of astronomers utilized this amazing array to investigate MACS1149-JD1, an exceedingly distant galaxy. The team was shocked to uncover tiny signs of ionized oxygen emitted about 13.3 billion years ago (or 500 million years after the Big Bang).

Jul 20, 2024

First stage of Australia’s biggest battery project energised to start flattening solar duck

Posted by in category: futurism

The first stage of what will be Australia’s biggest battery project has been energised – little more than a year after securing its development contract – and will soon be in operation to help flatten the growing solar duck in Western Australia’s main grid.

The Collie battery is being built by Neoen in two stages, including a 219 MW/877 MWh first stage that was among the first winners of special contracts issued last year to soak up rooftop solar in the middle of the day and time shift it to the evening peak.

A second stage of the battery – even bigger at 341 MW and 1,263 MWh – won a similar contract in a new tender held earlier this year and will become the biggest battery in the country when complete at 560 MW and 2,240 MWh.

Jul 20, 2024

Huawei sues MediaTek for patent infringement of unnamed technology

Posted by in category: futurism

MediaTek is a former supplier to Huawei.

Jul 20, 2024

Eye reflections: The key to detecting deepfakes

Posted by in categories: law, robotics/AI

Governments and organizations worldwide are beginning to recognize the potential dangers. Efforts are being made to develop more sophisticated deepfake detection tools and to establish legal frameworks to address the misuse of this technology.

However, the battle against these convincing fakes is ongoing, and as detection methods improve, so too do the techniques used to create them.

The combination of astronomical techniques and AI highlights a multidisciplinary approach to solving the problem, underscoring the need for innovative and collaborative solutions.

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