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Oct 21, 2021

Team discovers a new approach to unveil the Origin of Life: Evaporation

Posted by in category: futurism

What is the origin of life? It is a question that has consumed the work and time of scientists for centuries. Recently a group of researchers from the University of Hong Kong (HKU) has shed light on the possible ways forward to examine how living things are formed.

Oct 21, 2021

Solar desalination device will provide clean water to 400,000 Kenyans

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

A breakthrough in energy-efficient water infrastructure!

Oct 21, 2021

‘Time is elastic’: Why time passes faster atop a mountain than at sea level

Posted by in category: physics

The idea of ‘absolute time’ is an illusion. Physics and subjective experience reveal why.

Oct 21, 2021

Autonomous Racing Drones Dodge Through Forests at 40 kph

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI

It seems inevitable that sooner or later, the performance of autonomous drones will surpass the performance of even the best human pilots. Usually things in robotics that seem inevitable happen later as opposed to sooner, but drone technology seems to be the exception to this. We’ve seen an astonishing amount of progress over the past few years, even to the extent of sophisticated autonomy making it into the hands of consumers at an affordable price.

The cutting edge of drone research right now is putting drones with relatively simple onboard sensing and computing in situations that require fast and highly aggressive maneuvers. In a paper published yesterday in Science Robotics, roboticists from Davide Scaramuzza’s Robotics and Perception Group at the University of Zurich along with partners at Intel demonstrate a small, self-contained, fully autonomous drone that can aggressively fly through complex environments at speeds of up to 40kph.

Oct 21, 2021

A ‘Historic Event’: First Malaria Vaccine Approved by W.H.O

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The world has gained a new weapon in the war on malaria, among the oldest known and deadliest of infectious diseases: the first vaccine shown to help prevent the disease. By one estimate, it will save tens of thousands of children each year.

Malaria kills about half a million people each year, nearly all of them in sub-Saharan Africa — including 260,000 children under 5. The new vaccine, made by GlaxoSmithKline, rouses a child’s immune system to thwart Plasmodium falciparum, the deadliest of five malaria pathogens and the most prevalent in Africa.

The World Health Organization on Wednesday endorsed the vaccine, the first step in a process that should lead to wide distribution in poor countries. To have a malaria vaccine that is safe, moderately effective and ready for distribution is “a historic event,” said Dr. Pedro Alonso, director of the W.H.O.’s global malaria program.

Oct 21, 2021

Chinese scientists build weapon that can cause satellites to explode

Posted by in category: satellites

Researchers who built the device say it can lock itself onto the thruster nozzles used by most satellites and stay there for long periods undetected.

Oct 21, 2021

Sri Lanka receives toxic chemicals from China, will sue Chinese company | WION News

Posted by in categories: chemistry, food

Sri Lanka has become the latest victim of China’s toxic counterfeit culture. After receiving the first consignment of organic fertilizers from China, the Sri Lankan agriculture ministry has found that 20,000 metric tons of fertilizers are toxic.

#Srilanka #China #Fertilizers.

Continue reading “Sri Lanka receives toxic chemicals from China, will sue Chinese company | WION News” »

Oct 21, 2021

Lab-grown meat: The future of food? | FT Food Revolution

Posted by in categories: economics, futurism

Rearing animals for human consumption and clearing land to grow their feed causes untold environmental damage. Mass-producing plant-based proteins could be equally unsustainable. New technologies are being developed to grow pork, beef and chicken-like tissue in the lab, but can output be upscaled enough to make a real difference?

#agriculture #foodproduction

Continue reading “Lab-grown meat: The future of food? | FT Food Revolution” »

Oct 21, 2021

A Second Object Crashed into Jupiter in Just One Month (video)

Posted by in categories: asteroid/comet impacts, existential risks

According to astronomers, several asteroids with diameters more than 10 meters collide with the surface of the solar system’s largest planet every year, causing explosions visible from Earth. Previously, such collisions were registered in 1,994 2009, 2,010 2012, 2,016 2017 and 2019.

If confirmed, this will be the ninth recorded impact on Jupiter since the first in July 1,994 when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 shattered into several smaller pieces, sinking one after another into the giant’s gas shell, leaving dark marks on the clouds of Jupiter, some of them the size of our planet.

Continue reading “A Second Object Crashed into Jupiter in Just One Month (video)” »

Oct 21, 2021

The People Bringing NASA’s Orion to Life: The Crew Module

Posted by in category: space