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Apr 13, 2022

Particle physics could be rewritten after shock W boson measurement

Posted by in category: particle physics

A new measurement of a fundamental particle called the W boson appears to defy the standard model of particle physics, our current understanding of how the basic building blocks of the universe interact. The result, which was a decade in the making, will be heavily scrutinised, but if it holds true, it could lead to entirely new theories of physics.

“It would be the biggest discovery since, well, since the start of the standard model 60 years ago,” says Martijn Mulders at the CERN particle physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, who has written a commentary on the result for the journal Science.

The standard model describes three distinct forces: electromagnetism, the strong force and the weak force. Particles called bosons serve as mediators for these forces between particles of matter. The weak force, which is responsible for radioactive decay, uses the W boson as one of its messengers.

Apr 13, 2022

This Temporary Tattoo Can Monitor Diabetics’ Glucose Levels as Accurately as a Finger Prick

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Circa 2015


Engineers from the University of California, San Diego have developed an ultra-thin temporary tattoo that can painlessly and accurately monitor the glucose levels of diabetics.

The flexible device costs just a few cents and lasts for a day at a time, and early tests have shown that it’s just as sensitive as a finger-prick test.

Continue reading “This Temporary Tattoo Can Monitor Diabetics’ Glucose Levels as Accurately as a Finger Prick” »

Apr 13, 2022

These temporary tattoos measure glucose

Posted by in categories: chemistry, electronics

Circa 2015


Researchers have taken a regular gel pen and turned it into a DIY chemical sensor.

Apr 13, 2022

These plastic batteries could help store renewable energy on the grid

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

A new type of battery made from electrically conductive polymers—basically plastic—could help make energy storage on the grid cheaper and more durable, enabling a greater use of renewable power.

The batteries, made by Boston-based startup PolyJoule, could offer a less expensive and longer-lasting alternative to lithium-ion batteries for storing electricity from intermittent sources like wind and solar.

Apr 13, 2022

SaaS Outages: When Lightning Strikes, Thunder Rolls

Posted by in categories: business, climatology

… along with new, unfamiliar — and often poorly understood — risks.

Technology and business risks morph with changes in technology and how it is delivered. While cloud services are often considered more dependable, businesses face new risks with SaaS and public cloud — risks that are unfamiliar or not completely understood. People’s eyes pop open and ears perk up when they witness prolonged outage events such as the current issue with Atlassian. Suddenly, SaaS dependencies and resilience issues become relevant, as a business can’t access its favorite SaaS tool. The unique risk of using SaaS is that you don’t have control over the application or the tool and cannot reimplement yourself. It is also important to understand the cascading risks, as some of the well-known SaaS services are hosted on a leading hyperscaler’s infrastructure. You need to analyze the business impact of SaaS and cloud services outages just like for any other technology in your portfolio.

Trust but verify vendor claims about service-level agreements supporting operations and resilience plans. To ensure that your SaaS providers deliver on their own promises:

Apr 13, 2022

House-flipping algorithms are coming to your neighborhood

Posted by in category: information science

Despite millions of dollars in losses by the likes of Zillow, iBuying’s failure doesn’t signal the end of tech-led disruption, just a fumbled beginning.

Apr 13, 2022

Engineers enlist AI to help scale up advanced solar cell manufacturing

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, solar power, sustainability

Perovskites are a family of materials that are currently the leading contender to potentially replace today’s silicon-based solar photovoltaics. They hold the promise of panels that are far thinner and lighter, that could be made with ultra-high throughput at room temperature instead of at hundreds of degrees, and that are cheaper and easier to transport and install. But bringing these materials from controlled laboratory experiments into a product that can be manufactured competitively has been a long struggle.

Manufacturing perovskite-based involves optimizing at least a dozen or so variables at once, even within one particular manufacturing approach among many possibilities. But a new system based on a novel approach to could speed up the development of optimized production methods and help make the next generation of solar power a reality.

The system, developed by researchers at MIT and Stanford University over the last few years, makes it possible to integrate data from prior experiments, and information based on personal observations by experienced workers, into the machine learning process. This makes the outcomes more accurate and has already led to the manufacturing of perovskite cells with an energy conversion efficiency of 18.5 percent, a competitive level for today’s market.

Apr 13, 2022

What Russia’s war means for the International Space Station

Posted by in categories: futurism, space

Can the US and Russia still collaborate in space?

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Continue reading “What Russia’s war means for the International Space Station” »

Apr 13, 2022

Space Perspective unveils lavish interior of balloon-borne tourist capsule

Posted by in category: space travel

Spaceship Neptune will start carrying customers to the stratosphere in 2024, if all goes according to plan.


Space Perspective wants its passengers to fly in style.

The Florida-based company is working to send paying customers (as well as research payloads) to the stratosphere aboard its “Spaceship Neptune,” a pressurized capsule that will cruise high above Earth beneath an enormous balloon.

Apr 13, 2022

Maxar eager to launch new satellites amid soaring demand for imagery over Ukraine

Posted by in categories: government, satellites

WASHINGTON – As Maxar Technologies’ satellites continue to collect images of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the company is working with customers so it can allocate more capacity to meet U.S. government needs, said Maxar’s CEO Daniel Jablonsky.

With four satellites in orbit, “a lot of times we don’t have a lot of spare capacity,” Jablonsky said in an interview last week at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs.

“But we made accommodations with some of our other customers to be able to surge capacity for the U.S. and allies,” he said. The company also gets about 200 requests a day for imagery from news media organizations.