Menu

Blog

Page 3774

Oct 27, 2022

Brightest-Ever Space Explosion Could Help Explain Dark Matter

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics

A recent gamma-ray burst known as the BOAT — “brightest of all time” — appears to have produced a high-energy particle that shouldn’t exist. For some, dark matter provides the explanation.

Oct 27, 2022

How Do You Solve a Problem Like a Proton? You Smash It to Smithereens — Then Build It Back Together With Machine Learning

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI

Berkeley Lab scientists have developed new machine learning algorithms to accelerate the analysis of data collected decades ago by HERA, the world’s most powerful electron-proton collider that ran at the DESY national research center in Germany from 1992 to 2007.

Oct 27, 2022

Scientists Say They’ve Figured Out a Way to Read Thoughts Using an MRI Machine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, information science, neuroscience

Researchers claim to have built a “decoder” algorithm that can reconstruct what somebody is thinking just by monitoring their brain activity using MRI.

Oct 26, 2022

Elon Musk Visits Twitter as $44 Billion Deal Nears Completion

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel, sustainability

Mr. Musk, who runs Tesla and SpaceX, visited Twitter’s San Francisco headquarters on Wednesday and tweeted a nine-second video of himself smiling and carrying a porcelain sink into the building.

“Entering Twitter HQ — let that sink in!” he wrote.


The world’s richest man arrived at Twitter’s San Francisco offices on Wednesday ahead of a Friday deadline to complete the acquisition of the social media service.

Continue reading “Elon Musk Visits Twitter as $44 Billion Deal Nears Completion” »

Oct 26, 2022

New class of porous metal nanoparticles will yield new capabilities in absorption, chemical sensing and separations

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, nanotechnology

Researchers from Northwestern University have made a significant advance in the way they produce exotic open-framework superlattices made of hollow metal nanoparticles.

Using tiny hollow particles termed metallic nanoframes and modifying them with appropriate sequences of DNA, the team found they could synthesize open-channel superlattices with pores ranging from 10 to 1,000 nanometers in size—sizes that have been difficult to access until now. This newfound control over porosity will enable researchers to use these colloidal crystals in molecular absorption and storage, separations, chemical sensing, catalysis and many optical applications.

The new study identifies 12 unique porous nanoparticle superlattices with control over symmetry, geometry and pore connectivity to highlight the generalizability of new design rules as a route to making novel materials.

Oct 26, 2022

SpaceX announces a new ‘flat high performance’ Starlink dish for internet on moving vehicles

Posted by in categories: internet, space

The newly-designed dish allows users to have a permanent high-performance Starlink installation on their vehicles.

SpaceX announced it is now accepting orders for its new “flat high-performance” Starlink dish for moving vehicles.

In a Tuesday tweet, the private space firm explained that the new offering allows customers to “enjoy high-speed, low-latency internet while on the move!”

Oct 26, 2022

Shutterstock collaborates with OpenAI to start selling AI-generated art

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The stock photography company will incorporate AI-generated content into its website using Open-AI’s DALL-E image generator.

Shutterstock recently announced that it will partner with OpenAI to start selling content created using artificial intelligence software.


Igor Kutyaev/iStock.

Continue reading “Shutterstock collaborates with OpenAI to start selling AI-generated art” »

Oct 26, 2022

NASA-funded space robots will grab objects in orbit using arms controlled from Earth

Posted by in categories: business, robotics/AI, space

The company that will work with US Space Force has also won some NASA contracts.

It’s official: robots are here to stay in space. Robotics software and engineering company PickNik Robotics announced on Tuesday that it has won a SpaceWERX contract to work on robotics for the US Space Force, according to a press release acquired by IE

Continue reading “NASA-funded space robots will grab objects in orbit using arms controlled from Earth” »

Oct 26, 2022

A new study reveals how word and face recognition can be supported with only half the brain

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Researchers conclude that one hemisphere of the brain can adequately function as if it were doing so for two hemispheres.

People who underwent surgery as children to remove half of their brain were still able to accurately recognize differences between pairs of words or faces.

The research was done to study brain plasticity and perception. Plasticity is when the brain can be molded to reorganize itself in the hemispheric region not injured, or in this case, the only hemispheric region that is there. The participants were able to correctly identify differences between words or faces with more than 80% accuracy.

Oct 26, 2022

This thumb-sized microscope captures ‘neural landscapes’ from deep inside animal brains

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

The new design came with three fundamental improvements.

Researchers have finally managed to reduce the two-photon fluorescence microscope into a thumb size device that allows them to see inside the brain of live and active animals. The device called Mini2P weighs just 2.4 grams and can be attached to a mouse’s head without compromising its natural movements.

Continue reading “This thumb-sized microscope captures ‘neural landscapes’ from deep inside animal brains” »