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Oct 7, 2021

An ultra detailed map of the brain region that controls movement, from mice to monkeys to humans

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health, neuroscience

It probably didn’t feel like much, but that simple kind of motion required the concerted effort of millions of different neurons in several regions of your brain, followed by signals sent at 200 mph from your brain to your spinal cord and then to the muscles that contracted to move your arm.

At the cellular level, that quick motion is a highly complicated process and, like most things that involve the human brain, scientists don’t fully understand how it all comes together.

Continue reading “An ultra detailed map of the brain region that controls movement, from mice to monkeys to humans” »

Oct 7, 2021

How one overlooked company paved the way for Blue Origin and SpaceX

Posted by in category: space travel

Not all private space players make as much noise as Musk, Bezos, and Branson.


It may get less coverage than SpaceX and Virgin Galactic, but Space Adventures has helped a huge number of people get to space.

Oct 7, 2021

1 Million Neurons Tracked in Real Time

Posted by in category: neuroscience

A new method – which has been dubbed “light beads microscopy” – is described in the journal Nature. This offers a creative solution that pushes the limits of imaging speed and is limited only by the physical nature of fluorescence itself. It eliminates the “deadtime” between sequential laser pulses when no neuroactivity is recorded and at the same time the need for scanning.

The technique breaks one strong pulse into 30 smaller sub-pulses, each at a different strength, which dive into 30 different depths of scattering but induce the same amount of fluorescence at each depth. This is accomplished with a cavity of mirrors that staggers the firing of each pulse in time and ensures that they can all reach their target depths via a single microscope focusing lens. Using this approach, the only limit to the rate at which samples can be recorded is the time it takes the fluorescent tags to flare. That means broad swathes of the brain can be recorded within the same time it would take a conventional two-photon microscope to capture a much smaller network of brain cells.

Scientists at Rockefeller University, New York, integrated their new system into a microscopy platform with access to a large brain volume. This enabled the recording of activity in more than a million neurons across the entire cortex of a mouse brain for the first time.

Oct 7, 2021

Jetpacks That Fly On Autopilot At 48 Kmph Coming To Ease Your Work Commute

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Ever wanted a jetpack that flies easily? A start-up from England may have just created a jetpack that requires minimal training and runs on autopilot as well.

Oct 7, 2021

SpaceX is adding two more Crew Dragons to its fleet

Posted by in category: space travel

SpaceX is about to double the size of its fleet of Crew Dragon spaceships. The company is debuting a new spacecraft for a NASA launch later this month, and is building a fourth human-rated capsule that should be ready for flight early next year, a SpaceX official said Wednesday.

Sarah Walker, director of SpaceX’s Dragon mission management office, confirmed Wednesday the company is readying a fourth Crew Dragon spacecraft for an inaugural flight next year. SpaceX and NASA officials previously announced that the next NASA crew mission, known as Crew-3, scheduled for liftoff Oct. 30 will use a new vehicle.

“It’s really exciting to introduce another Crew Dragon to our fleet to support our human spaceflight manifest,” Walker said. “We’ve got another one in the production line now. It should be ready in the spring to support more human spaceflight missions.”

Oct 7, 2021

Rocket Lab stock surges after NASA deal to launch solar sail announced

Posted by in category: satellites

Rocket Lab USA Incsoared higher in after-hours trading Wednesday, following an announcement that the company has been chosen to fly an experimental solar sail into space.

NASA signed on with Rocket Lab RKLB, +10.43% to demonstrate the U.S. agency’s Advanced Composite Solar Sail System, or ACS3. The solar sail will be launched into space to demonstrate the efficacy of a technology that could be an alternative to satellites for specific duties.

Oct 7, 2021

3 years after tiny spacecraft made Mars history, where are all their successors?

Posted by in category: satellites

Cubesats going interplanetary push the constraints of spacecraft missions in dramatic ways that scientists and engineers are still learning how to navigate.

Oct 7, 2021

Holograms Are (Maybe, Finally) Real: Eyes on With Light Field Labs’ SolidLight

Posted by in category: holograms

We got a sneak peek at a hologram chameleon and wristwatch from San Jose-based Light Field Lab, which expects companies to begin debuting large-scale versions of its holographic display next year.

Oct 7, 2021

Flying robot can also ride a skateboard and balance on a rope

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space travel

A versatile robot inspired by birds can walk, balance on a slackline, skateboard and even fly – a mix of skills that could be useful for monitoring power lines or space exploration.

Oct 7, 2021

Are We Reaching the End of Human Death? w/ L. Parrish, J. Cordeiro, A. de Grey and D. Wood

Posted by in categories: business, life extension

Four futurists and longevity leaders: Liz Parrish, José Cordeiro, Aubrey de Gray and David Wood, took the stage to discuss whether science and technology is heading us to the end of human death.

The discussion took place on october 6 2021, during the celebration of the event South Summit Innovation is Business that took place in Madrid from october 5 to 07.

Continue reading “Are We Reaching the End of Human Death? w/ L. Parrish, J. Cordeiro, A. de Grey and D. Wood” »