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Feb 27, 2022
Mriya: World’s biggest cargo plane destroyed by the Russian army
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: transportation
Feb 27, 2022
How cryptocurrencies could help Russia vitiate the U.S. sanctions
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: cryptocurrencies, economics
Feb 27, 2022
China to fund infrastructure projects for a greener world
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: policy
Feb 27, 2022
Physicists get closer than ever to measuring the elusive neutrino
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: particle physics
Feb 27, 2022
Developing Time Crystals for Use in Real-World Applications
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: particle physics, space
Time crystals that persist indefinitely at room temperature could have applications in precision timekeeping.
We have all seen crystals, whether a simple grain of salt or sugar, or an elaborate and beautiful amethyst. These crystals are made of atoms or molecules repeating in a symmetrical three-dimensional pattern called a lattice, in which atoms occupy specific points in space. By forming a periodic lattice, carbon atoms in a diamond, for example, break the symmetry of the space they sit in. Physicists call this “breaking symmetry.”
Scientists have recently discovered that a similar effect can be witnessed in time. Symmetry breaking, as the name suggests, can arise only where some sort of symmetry exists. In the time domain, a cyclically changing force or energy source naturally produces a temporal pattern.
Feb 27, 2022
Biologists successfully hatched gene-edited ticks for the first time
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, genetics
A five-year experiment to genetically modify deer ticks, or black-legged ticks, using CRISPR/Cas9 ends in success, marking a first in biology.
Feb 27, 2022
Startups scramble in wake of Ukraine invasion
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
Welcome to Startups Weekly, a fresh human-first take on this week’s startup news and trends. To get this in your inbox, subscribe here.
I’m doing an abbreviated newsletter this week as I want to spend most of my energy amplifying the brave journalists on the ground reporting about this scary time. As so many have said — far more eloquently than me — the invasion of Ukraine is a story that impacts all of us, whether we’re on the ground there or not. And it’s hard to celebrate a funding round when scary times are the moment.
My brilliant colleagues put together a story on how the tech industry is responding to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine; I urge you to read it. While the situation is still ongoing, it’s clear that it’s already a tech story. And startups such as Grammarly, Ajax, People AI and Preply, backed by some of the world’s biggest VCs, are scrambling to support employees and operations amid the invasion.
Feb 27, 2022
Florida man bought Tesla storage batteries for his solar system, pays almost nothing to FPL
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: climatology, habitats, sustainability
Fred Closter doesn’t like Florida Power & Light.
When the Boynton Beach retiree spent $24,000 to install solar panels on the roof of his Boynton Beach home a year ago, he decided not to rely on the utility to power his home when the panels weren’t generating electricity at night and when it rains.
So he dropped another $16,000 on two large lithium ion batteries made by Tesla that can power the home for up to a day and a half if his panels aren’t producing. If a hurricane or other severe storm with the potential to create power outages approaches, the Closters’ solar provider, SunPower, will remotely direct the system to charge their batteries so their power won’t be interrupted.