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Feb 12, 2022
Tesla releases sneak peek of its Gigafactory Berlin’s ‘most advanced paint shop’ enabling new colors
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: sustainability, transportation
Tesla has released a quick sneak peek of the paint shop inside Gigafactory Berlin, which the automaker has been taunting as “its most advanced paint shop” yet – and it should enable new colors.
It’s literally has been years since Tesla has launched a new vehicle paint color.
Feb 12, 2022
Mystery Tsunami That Spread Around The World in 2021 Can Finally Be Explained
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: futurism
Last year in August, a surprise tsunami in the South Atlantic Ocean mushroomed to distances over 10,000 kilometers (more than 6,000 miles) away, rippling through the North Atlantic, the Pacific, and the Indian Oceans.
It was the first time a tsunami had been recorded in three different oceans since the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, and scientists have only just now figured out how the waves were triggered.
The epicenter of the August earthquake was measured 47 kilometers (about 30 miles) below the ocean floor, which is much too deep to initiate a significant tsunami, even one with relatively small waves between 15 and 75 centimeters tall (6 to 30 inches).
Feb 12, 2022
Out of a total of 23 monkeys implanted with Elon Musk’s Neuralink brain chips at the University of California Davis between 2017 and 2020, at least 15 reportedly died
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: biotech/medical, computing, Elon Musk, neuroscience
Via Business Insider and the New York Post, the news comes from the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, an animal-rights group that viewed over 700 pages of documents, veterinary records, and necropsy reports through a public records request at the university.
-Wren Graves.
Feb 12, 2022
How 6 Million Pounds of Electronic Waste gets Recycled a month
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: materials
Only 17% of electronic waste, that they’re full of tiny, toxic materials that are hard and expensive to break down, is recycled.
That’s because devices aren’t designed to be recycled.
Feb 12, 2022
Researchers Have Achieved Sustained Long-Distance Quantum Teleportation
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics
In a way, entangled particles behave as if they are aware of how the other particle is behaving. Quantum particles, at any point, are in a quantum state of probabilities, where properties like position, momentum, and spin of the particle are not precisely determined until there is some measurement. For entangled particles, the quantum state of each depends on the quantum state of the other; if one particle is measured and changes state, for example, the other particle’s state will change accordingly.
The study aimed to teleport the state of quantum qubits, or “quantum bits,” which are the basic units of quantum computing. According to the study, the researchers set up what is basically a compact network with three nodes: Alice, Charlie, and Bob. In this experiment, Alice sends a qubit to Charlie. Bob has an entangled pair of qubits, and also sends one qubit to Charlie, where it interferes with Alice’s qubit. Charlie projects Alice’s qubit onto an entangled quantum Bell State that transfers the state of Alice’s original qubit to Bob’s remaining qubit.
The breakthrough is notable for a few reasons. Many previous demonstrations of quantum teleportation have proven to be unstable over long distances. For example, in 2016, researchers at the University of Calgary were able to perform quantum teleportation at a distance of six kilometers. This was the world record at the time and was seen as a major achievement.
Feb 12, 2022
Moon develops targeted, reliable, long-lasting kill switch
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: biological, chemistry, engineering, genetics, space
Tae Seok Moon, associate professor of energy, environmental and chemical engineering at the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, has taken a big step forward in his quest to design a modular, genetically engineered kill switch that integrates into any genetically engineered microbe, causing it to self-destruct under certain defined conditions.
His research was published Feb. 3 in the journal Nature Communications.
Feb 12, 2022
Behold the 1st images from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope!
Posted by Joaquín Alvira Enríquez in category: space
JW first light and selfie.
The team behind NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope released some of the first images from the much-anticipated observatory on Friday (Feb. 11), and while the photos aren’t exactly stunning, they mark a huge scientific milestone.
Feb 12, 2022
Artificial Intelligence expert warns AI may be ‘slightly conscious’
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: robotics/AI
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever claims that ‘it may be that today’s large neural networks are slightly conscious,’ but didn’t explain exactly what this means or which network achieved this.