Menu

Blog

Page 4259

May 6, 2022

Using radar to monitor burn victims and babies? It’s now possible

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, military

University of Sydney scientists have achieved a technology breakthrough with potentially life-saving applications—all using an improved version of radar.

Traditionally, is associated with airport control towers or military fighter jets, but a new, highly sensitive radar developed at the University of Sydney takes this technology into the human range.

Called advanced photonic radar, the ultra-high-resolution device is so sensitive it can detect an object’s location, speed, and/or angle in millimeters as opposed to meters. This could enable usage in hospitals to monitor people’s vital signs such as breathing and heart rate.

May 6, 2022

Graviton and Massive Symmetric Rank-Two Tensor in String Theory

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Abstract: Spin-two particles appear in the spectra of both open and closed string theories. We studied a graviton and massive symmetric rank-two tensor in string theory, both of which carry spin two. A graviton is a massless spin-two particle in closed string theory while a symmetric rank-two tensor is a massive particle with spin two in open string theory. Using Polyakov’s string path integral formulation of string scattering amplitudes, we calculated cubic interactions of both spin-two particles explicitly, including $\ap$-corrections (string corrections). We observed that the cubic interactions of the massive spin-two particle differed from those of the graviton. The massive symmetric rank-two tensor in open string theory becomes massless in the high energy limit where $\ap \rightarrow \infty$ and $\ap$-correction terms, containing higher derivatives, dominate: In this limit the local cubic action of the symmetric rank-two tensor of open string theory coincides with that of the graviton in closed string theory.

From: Taejin Lee [view email].

May 6, 2022

What If We Use Rockets Rather Than Airplanes to Get Around Our Planet?

Posted by in category: space travel

Is this what a future Canadian Starport Network will look like when rockets deliver people and cargo almost anywhere in from 10 minutes to no more than one hour?


A space gold rush is underway as the technology to get to space goes commercial with plans to introduce global rocket travel.

May 6, 2022

ML Breaking CAPTCHA is a Sign that Humans will Surrender to Machines Soon

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

CAPTCHA is broken by machine learning (ML)— does it mean machines are winning over humans due to digital transformation? This article explores whether humans can surrender to machines in the future.

May 6, 2022

Job interest in Twitter skyrocketed more than 250% since Elon Musk moved to take over. But current employees are nervous

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, sustainability, transportation

Elon Musk cast Twitter’s future into uncertainty when he made a successful $44 billion bid to acquire the company last month. He will take over as temporary CEO once the deal is complete, CNBC reported Thursday morning.

While countless Musk fans, and a slight majority of Americans—59%—approve of the takeover according to recent data from The Harris Poll, some current Twitter staff worry that it will dramatically change the company’s culture, and overall direction.

It’s still unclear how a Musk-run Twitter might impact the company’s ability to retain current staff and recruit new employees. The company presented the takeover as a potential threat to its staffing abilities in an SEC filing Monday.

Continue reading “Job interest in Twitter skyrocketed more than 250% since Elon Musk moved to take over. But current employees are nervous” »

May 6, 2022

Spontaneous Magnetic Reversal of Monster Black Hole Sparks Enigmatic Outburst

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, security

NASA’s Swift Observatory Tracks Potential Magnetic Flip of Monster Black Hole A rare and enigmatic outburst from an active galaxy 236 million light-years away may have been sparked by a magnetic reversal, a spontaneous flip of the magnetic field surrounding its central black hole. In a comprehen.


A device, created at Stevens Institute of Technology, uses millimeter-wave imaging — the same technology used in airport security scanners — to scan a patient’s skin to detect if they have skin cancer. Millimeter-wave rays harmlessly penetrate about 2mm into human skin, so the team’s imaging technology provides a clear 3D map of scanned skin lesions.

Continue reading “Spontaneous Magnetic Reversal of Monster Black Hole Sparks Enigmatic Outburst” »

May 6, 2022

Bye, bye, biopsy? Handheld device could painlessly identify skin cancers

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, security

A device, created at Stevens Institute of Technology, uses millimeter-wave imaging — the same technology used in airport security scanners — to scan a patient’s skin to detect if they have skin cancer. Millimeter-wave rays harmlessly penetrate about 2mm into human skin, so the team’s imaging technology provides a clear 3D map of scanned skin lesions.

May 6, 2022

Elon Musk’s Neuralink rival Synchron starts human trials of implants

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, Elon Musk, neuroscience

Elon Musk’s Neuralink rival Synchron has begun human trials of its brain implant that lets the wearer control a computer using thought alone.

The firm’s Stentrode brain implant, about the size of a paperclip, will be implanted in six patients in New York and Pittsburgh who have severe paralysis.

Continue reading “Elon Musk’s Neuralink rival Synchron starts human trials of implants” »

May 6, 2022

Elon Musk expected to serve as temporary Twitter CEO after deal closes

Posted by in category: Elon Musk

May 6, 2022

At long last, GPU prices are now dropping below MSRP

Posted by in category: computing

With the GPU industry finally stabilizing after two years of shortages and inflated costs, prices for graphics cards are finally approaching their MSRPs.