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Oct 17, 2022

NASA Space Tech Could Give Us 5-Minute Electric Car Charging Times

Posted by in categories: biological, space, sustainability

Thanks to NASA, the world may soon have access to chargers that can top off an EV in as little as five minutes. One of the biggest obstacles to fast charging is dealing with temperature. According to NASA, for an EV to be charged in five minutes, the charger must deliver an electric current of 1,400 amperes. For reference, the fastest chargers currently available max out at around 520 amperes. More amperes equals more heat. A lot more heat. Companies and research organizations are pursuing solutions to the problem; Ford and Purdue University, for example, are exploring liquid-cooled charging cables.

A team sponsored by NASA’s Biological and Physical Sciences Division is working on technology that could provide another solution needed for ultra fast EV charging. The technology has been developed for use in space, in which massive temperature differentials require massive heat transfer capabilities. An experiment to prove the new tech, the Flow Boiling and Condensation Experiment (FBCE), was installed on the International Space Station and is providing data that NASA will use to determine if the system will provide the claimed orders-of-magnitude benefits in heat transfer efficiency.

We’re definitely not NASA-level engineers but we will try to explain the FBCE the best we can. The FBCE is made up of several modules; one of which is called a “Flow Boiling Module” (FBM). When cooling liquid inside the FBM begins to boil, the bubbles formed draw liquid from the inner part of the flow channel to its walls. The process “efficiently transfers heat by taking advantage of both the liquid’s lower temperature and the ensuing change of phase from liquid to vapor.” The technique has been dubbed “subcooled flow boiling.”

Oct 17, 2022

It’s the BOAT: Astronomers observe “brightest of all time” gamma-ray burst

Posted by in category: cosmology

On the morning of October 9, multiple space-based detectors picked up a powerful gamma-ray burst (GRB) passing through our solar system, sending astronomers around the world scrambling to train their telescopes on that part of the sky to collect vital data on the event and its afterglow. Dubbed GRB 221009A, astronomers say the gamma-ray burst is the most powerful yet recorded and likely could be the “birth cry” of a new black hole. The event was promptly published in the Astronomer’s Telegram, and observations are still ongoing.

“In our research group, we’ve been referring to this burst as the ‘BOAT,’ or Brightest Of All Time, because when you look at the thousands of bursts gamma-ray telescopes have been detecting since the 1990s, this one stands apart,” said Jillian Rastinejad, a graduate student at Northwestern University. Rastinejad led one of two independent teams using the Gemini South telescope in Chile to study the event’s afterglow.

“This burst is much closer than typical GRBs, which is exciting because it allows us to detect many details that otherwise would be too faint to see,” said Roberta Pillera, a graduate student at the Polytechnic University of Bari, Italy, and member of the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) Collaboration. “But it’s also among the most energetic and luminous bursts ever seen regardless of distance, making it doubly exciting.”

Oct 17, 2022

Missouri Elementary School Contaminated With Radioactive Waste

Posted by in categories: military, nuclear energy

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A new report shows there is a significant amount of radioactive contamination inside an elementary school in suburban St. Louis, near where waste was dumped from a World War II nuclear weapons factory.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been working for years to clean up toxic waste near the St. Louis Lambert International Airport, where byproducts from the weapons manufacturing were dumped near a waterway called Coldwater Creek.

Oct 17, 2022

Scientists Call For The Ocean to Be Recognized as a Living Being With Inherent Rights

Posted by in categories: energy, food, sustainability

O.o!!!


The ocean covers most of our planet’s surface, accounts for the majority of our oxygen production, and provides a significant amount of resources by way of food, minerals, and energy.

Yet our oceans are shockingly underrepresented when it comes to environmental conventions on an international scale.

Continue reading “Scientists Call For The Ocean to Be Recognized as a Living Being With Inherent Rights” »

Oct 17, 2022

Astronomers have a cataclysmic new theory to explain Uranus’ tilt

Posted by in category: space

It may have all started with a moon.


So it is not very likely that random minor impacts caused one planet to almost 70 degrees more than the other while not affecting their spin rates.

Similar spin rates point to much “smoother” processes that took place over eons but dramatically affected the properties of the two gas giants.

Continue reading “Astronomers have a cataclysmic new theory to explain Uranus’ tilt” »

Oct 17, 2022

In a ‘tour de force,’ researchers image an entire fly brain in minute detail

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Circa 2018 face_with_colon_three


“This data set—and the opportunities it creates—are … arguably one of the most important things to have happened in neurobiology recently,” says Rachel Wilson, a neurobiologist at Harvard University who was not involved in the new work. “Anyone in the world who is interested can download the data set and determine whether any two neurons … talk to each other.”

Continue reading “In a ‘tour de force,’ researchers image an entire fly brain in minute detail” »

Oct 17, 2022

Cutting-Edge Cancer Treatments: Advancing Genomic Medicine — Medical Frontiers-JAPAN Live & Programs

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health

Genomic medicine is undergoing rapid change after the Japanese public health insurance system began to cover genetic testing in 2019. Cancer patients who meet certain criteria are able to take these tests for a relatively affordable price, and their genetic information is collected in a massive database and analyzed with the help of around 170 hospitals across the country. But challenges remain, with suitable drugs available for only 10% of patients who undergo testing.

Oct 17, 2022

Quantum effects help make DNA unstable

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, quantum physics

Quantum effects play a hitherto unexpected role in creating instabilities in DNA – the so-called “molecule of life” that provides instructions for cellular processes in all living organisms. This conclusion, based on work by researchers at the University of Surrey in the UK, goes against long-held beliefs that quantum behaviour is not relevant in the wet, warm environment of cells, and could have far-reaching consequences for models of genetic mutation.

The two strands of the DNA double helix are linked together by hydrogen bonds between the DNA bases. There are typically four different bases, called Guanine (G), Cytosine ©, Adenine (A) and Thymine (T). In the standard configuration, A always bonds to T while C always bonds to G. However, if the protons (nuclei of the hydrogen atoms) that make up the bonds hop from one strand of DNA to the other then a genetic mutation can occur.

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Oct 17, 2022

What we know about the mysterious chamber discovered inside the Great Pyramid

Posted by in category: futurism

Circa 2017 o.o!


There are still unanswered questions about the one of the oldest structures in the world.

Oct 17, 2022

New cosmic-ray scan of the Great Pyramid of Giza could reveal hidden burial chamber

Posted by in category: futurism

The powerful scan of the Great Pyramid of Giza could finally reveal what’s inside its two mysterious voids after 4,500 years.