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Aug 2, 2022

Behold The Majesty of Andromeda In NASA’s Amazing Largest Ever Image Of The Galaxy

Posted by in category: space

Hubble has taken somewhat of a backseat since the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) began taking its first high resolution images of deep space last month. The first images shared by NASA from the newest space telescope were truly awe inspiring. But the space agency does not want you to forget one of its predecessors, the Hubble telescope, which has been inducing oohs and ahhs with its photos of space since its launch and deployment by the space shuttle Discovery in 1990.

One of the images that enamored viewers seven years ago, was recently shared by NASA on its Instagram feed once again. The image captured a sweeping bird’s-eye view of the Andromeda galaxy (M31), and is the sharpest large composite ever taken of the Milky Way’s neighbor. Even though Andromeda resides over 2 million light-years away, Hubble showed its photographic prowess to resolve individual stars in a 61,000 light-year-long stretch of the galaxy’s pancake-shaped disk.

Aug 2, 2022

Astronomers Find Super-Earth Skimming its Star’s Habitable Zone

Posted by in category: space

Researchers have reported the discovery of an exoplanet orbiting Ross 508 near the inner edge of its habitable zone.

Aug 2, 2022

New technique protects data on solid-state drives from radiation

Posted by in categories: computing, space

A new method of radiation-resistant computer data storage called watermark storage that’s been developed by a University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) professor leading a student team has direct applications in the nuclear power and space industries.

“Data-driven analytics are growing exponentially for space and nuclear environments,” says Dr. Biswajit Ray, an assistant professor of electrical and at UAH, a part of the University of Alabama System.

He says the new storage system doesn’t rely on an electronic charge for NAND flash storage, as traditional data drives do. NAND stands for the “not and” type of flash memory, which is in common use. Interestingly, the watermark storage method requires no new components.

Aug 2, 2022

A new tiny robot can lift a thousand times its own weight with artificial muscles

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, robotics/AI

Dubbed GRACE, the robot hand can even bend fingers and make realistic human movements.

Scientists have developed a new type of artificial muscle that can lift 1,000 times its own weight * 3D actuators were combined to form a real-life robot hand that could lift 8kg * The high-strength properties could be applied to create higher capabilities in other body parts and a range of devices.

A team of researchers from the Italian Institute of Technology has just developed a new class of high-strength artificial muscles that can stretch and contract like a human muscle in a way that has never been done before. According to a recent research paper, the muscles perform with a level of versatility and grace closely matched to life-like movements, and provide a boost in the development of three-dimensional functional devices such as artificial body parts. class of strong pneumatic artificial muscles has been developed and combined to form a robot hand that can lift up to thousand times its own weight.

Aug 2, 2022

The first firm to get an Apollo 11 contract is helping build NASA’s Artemis software

Posted by in category: space

August is ‘looking pretty good’ for the historic Artemis I mission, says Draper’s Pete Paceley.

An immense amount of work goes into programming the manual astronaut override for NASA’s upcoming crewed Artemis missions. As Pete Paceley, principal director of Civil and Commercial Space Systems at Draper, points out on a call with IE, “we don’t want them to ever have to use manual control — but it’s necessary from a safety standpoint.”

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Continue reading “The first firm to get an Apollo 11 contract is helping build NASA’s Artemis software” »

Aug 2, 2022

Astronauts will undergo surgeries aboard the ISS thanks to an autonomous robot

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

The autonomous, miniaturized robot could mimic movements used in surgery in space remotely.

MIRA, short for miniaturized in vivo robotic assistant\.


An autonomous, miniaturized robot could soon perform simulated tasks that mimic movements used in surgery without the help of doctors or astronauts.

Continue reading “Astronauts will undergo surgeries aboard the ISS thanks to an autonomous robot” »

Aug 2, 2022

Scientists reveal distribution of dark matter around galaxies 12 billion years ago–further back in time than ever before

Posted by in category: cosmology

Aug 2, 2022

In a world first, scientists rewrite DNA to cure ‘genetic heart conditions’

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Aug 2, 2022

A China-Taiwan conflict could lead to a catastrophic semiconductor shortage in the world

Posted by in category: computing

Aug 2, 2022

The ‘Benjamin Button’ effect: Scientists can reverse aging in mice. The goal is to do the same for humans

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Scientists at the University of Virginia School of Medicine and their collaborators have used DNA to overcome a nearly insurmountable obstacle to engineer materials that would revolutionize electronics.


Scientists around the world are scurrying to reverse the hands of time. Here’s a look at one lab’s search for the fountain of youth, where old mice have grown young again.