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Dec 14, 2021

We’ve Found A Unique Giant ‘Tatooine’ Planet That Orbits Two Stars Say Scientists

Posted by in category: alien life

Astronomers just found something unique in the Milky Way–a giant exoplanet in a 200-days orbit around two stars.

In a find that remind us of that binary sunset in the original Star Wars movie, the Tatooine-like “TIC 172900988b” is a Jupiter-sized planet.

Known as a “circumbinary” planet, TIC 172900988b’s existence has been revealed in a paper published in the Astronomical Journal by a team led by Veselin B. Kostov of the SETI Institute.

Continue reading “We’ve Found A Unique Giant ‘Tatooine’ Planet That Orbits Two Stars Say Scientists” »

Dec 14, 2021

A Luxurious Swiss Yacht Is Powered by Two Sustainable Fuels

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability, transportation

And it offers limitless range.

Zurich-based Swiss Sustainable Yachts has unveiled its new luxurious yacht that is powered by not one but two sustainable fuels, solar and hydrogen. Dubbed Aquon One, the yacht has all the amenities that your heart can desire on a yacht and comes with zero guilt, the New Atlas reported.

Even as cars are going the electric way, maritime transportation is yet to see the same kind of enthusiasm. The first electric ship may have made its maiden voyage, however, the limited range offered by electric batteries is a major challenge that still needs to be overcome. The makers of Aquon One couldn’t agree more and therefore, have opted for a hydrogen fuel cell-powered electric propulsion than massive batteries.

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Dec 14, 2021

You Can Only Mine 10 Percent of the Total Bitcoin Supply. Here’s Why

Posted by in category: bitcoin

Only 2.1 million are left.

Bitcoin passed a major milestone on Monday by reaching 90 percent of the total mineable supply as 18.9 million Bitcoin, out of a maximum of 21 million, have been mined and are in circulation in various exchanges.

Recent data show that the remaining mineable Bitcoin amount is at 2.1 million or 10 percent of the total supply. … See more.

Dec 14, 2021

Can an Artificial Intelligence Be Ethical? Researchers Asked AI, and It Sees Both Sides

Posted by in categories: ethics, robotics/AI

Welcome to the future of moral dilemmas.

Not a day passes without a fascinating snippet on the ethical challenges created by “black box” artificial intelligence systems. These use machine learning to figure out patterns within data and make decisions — often without a human giving them any moral basis for how to do it.

Continue reading “Can an Artificial Intelligence Be Ethical? Researchers Asked AI, and It Sees Both Sides” »

Dec 14, 2021

Artificial intelligence can create better lightning forecasts

Posted by in categories: climatology, information science, robotics/AI

Lightning is one of the most destructive forces of nature, as in 2020 when it sparked the massive California Lightning Complex fires, but it remains hard to predict. A new study led by the University of Washington shows that machine learning—computer algorithms that improve themselves without direct programming by humans—can be used to improve lightning forecasts.

Better lightning forecasts could help to prepare for potential wildfires, improve safety warnings for lightning and create more accurate long-range climate models.

“The best subjects for machine learning are things that we don’t fully understand. And what is something in the atmospheric sciences field that remains poorly understood? Lightning,” said Daehyun Kim, a UW associate professor of atmospheric sciences. “To our knowledge, our work is the first to demonstrate that machine learning algorithms can work for lightning.”

Dec 14, 2021

Physicists close in on the exceedingly short life of the Higgs boson

Posted by in category: particle physics

Scientists have made the most precise estimate of the Higgs boson’s lifetime yet, which aligns with decades-old predictions.

Dec 14, 2021

Physicists create new state of matter from quantum soup of magnetically weird particles

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics

The messy quantum soup of spin states allows for quantum entanglement across an entire material.

Dec 14, 2021

Parker Solar Probe: A spacecraft has ‘touched’ the sun for the first time

Posted by in categories: physics, space

On April 28, 2021, at 933 UT (3:33 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time), NASA’s Parker Solar Probe reached the sun’s extended solar atmosphere, known as the corona, and spent five hours there. The spacecraft is the first to enter the outer boundaries of our sun.

The results, published in Physical Review Letters, were announced in a press conference at the American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2021 on December 14. The manuscript is open-access and freely available to download.

Continue reading “Parker Solar Probe: A spacecraft has ‘touched’ the sun for the first time” »

Dec 14, 2021

Media Briefing: Science Launching to the Space Station

Posted by in categories: science, space

Dec 14, 2021

This is the Future of Moore’s Law — Intel’s Incredible Plans

Posted by in categories: business, computing

Intel has just announced their plans to continue Moore’s Law well into the next decade which promises us up to a 10x performance and efficiency increase through new hardware semiconductor approaches. For example with the help of 3D CPU Transistors or GAAFET. The breakthroughs revealed at IEDM 2021 demonstrate Intel is on track to continue the advancement and benefits of Moore’s Law well beyond 2025 through its three areas of pathfinding and maybe even beat its competitors TSMC and Samsung in the fab business.

TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 Moore’s Law isn’t dead.
01:41 What is Moore’s Law?
03:08 How Intel will continue Moore’s Law.
06:22 Intels Competitors.
09:16 Last Words.

#intel #hardware #mooreslaw