Menu

Blog

Page 5537

Nov 19, 2021

The technology we (or aliens) need for long-distance interstellar travel

Posted by in categories: physics, space travel

Solutions to the problems of interstellar travel

Given the insane scale of interstellar distances, how might we extrapolate from the physics we do understand to envisioning possible ways that aliens (or us in the future) could cross the cosmic void? There are a few possible solutions to the problem of interstellar travel.

Nov 19, 2021

Are Black Holes Actually Fuzzballs?

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

Learn More about Brilliant: https://brilliant.org/SpaceTime/

Take the PBS Digital Studios audience survey: https://to.pbs.org/2021survey.

Continue reading “Are Black Holes Actually Fuzzballs?” »

Nov 19, 2021

There’s a Weird Shape in The Middle of Andromeda, And Astronomers Finally Know Why

Posted by in category: cosmology

There’s a mysteriously shaped cluster of stars at the center of the Andromeda Galaxy, around 2.5 million light-years away and neighbor to the Milky Way. It’s been causing astronomers to furrow their brows and stroke their chins for decades at this point.

However, new research into how galaxies – and the supermassive black holes at their centers – can collide together may offer an explanation for this cluster. It seems that it might be caused by a gravitational ‘kick’, something similar to the recoil of a shotgun but on a cosmic scale.

This latest study suggests the kick would be powerful enough to create an elongated mass of millions of stars – technically known as an eccentric nuclear disk – instead of the sort of symmetric star cluster that would typically be in the center of a galaxy like Andromeda.

Nov 18, 2021

SpaceX details plan to build Mars Base Alpha with reusable Starship rockets

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel, sustainability

For the first time, SpaceX has teamed up with researchers from NASA and several other US institutions to publicly discuss how it plans to use Starship to build Mars Base Alpha.

Save for a handful of comments spread around the periphery of SpaceX and CEO Elon Musk’s main focus, Starship itself, the company and its executives have almost never specifically discussed how the next-generation fully-reusable rocket will be used to create a permanent human presence on Mars. For the most part, that clear focus on near-term hurdles is hard to fault. Half a century of mostly theoretical analysis has made it abundantly clear that a permanent and sustainable extraterrestrial human outpost is impossible without a radical reduction in the cost of access to space. For decades, NASA has studied and studied and studied slight variations of a plan that would cost hundreds of billions of dollars to send a few astronauts to Mars for a few months at a time.

Put simply, without a revolution in space transport, even a temporary presence on Mars where inhabitants are mostly dependent on imported goods is infeasible unless Mars exploration is made a national or international priority on the order of tens of billions of dollars per year. Over the 80–90 years that spaceflight has been seriously pondered, dozens of groups and papers and studies and space agencies have imagined what that revolution might look like and SpaceX is not unique for proposing a solution to that longstanding problem. However, SpaceX is the first of that long list of contenders to propose a solution and both invest significant resources and put hammer to metal in an attempt to make that vision real.

Nov 18, 2021

Scientists Invent Camera That Can See Through Almost Anything

Posted by in category: electronics

Engineers have created a powerful camera that can see through solid and opaque objects such as fog, corners, or even human flesh and bone.

Nov 18, 2021

Shapeshifting Microrobots that Fight Cancer on a Cellular Level

Posted by in categories: 4D printing, biotech/medical, robotics/AI

No, it’s not from a science fiction movie or from an episode of a popular kid’s television show. It’s real life. Researchers, in a proof-of-concept study, have made fish-shaped microrobots that are guided with magnets to cancer cells, where a pH change triggers them to open their mouths and release their chemotherapy cargo.

Scientists have previously made microscale (smaller than 100 µm) robots that can manipulate tiny objects, but most can’t change their shapes to perform complex tasks, such as releasing drugs. Some groups have made 4D-printed objects (3D-printed devices that change shape in response to certain stimuli), but they typically perform only simple actions, and their motion can’t be controlled remotely.

In a step toward biomedical applications for these devices, Jiawen Li, Li Zhang, Dong Wu and colleagues wanted to develop shape-morphing microrobots that could be guided by magnets to specific sites to deliver treatments. Because tumors exist in acidic microenvironments, the team decided to make the microrobots change shape in response to lowered pH.

Nov 18, 2021

5 kinds of technology that the US’s top spy catchers say rivals are gaining an edge in

Posted by in category: futurism

The first prize money has been awarded in the largest XPrize competition ever held, with 23 student.

Nov 18, 2021

XPrize announces first winners for Elon Musk’s $100-Million Carbon removal competition

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, finance

The first prize money has been awarded in the largest XPrize competition ever held, with 23 student teams getting financial injections to further their carbon removal technology.

Among the winners are a variety of forward-thinking initiatives addressing the issue of rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, as well as those that seek to address more than one environmental issue at the same time.

The US$100 million Carbon Removal XPrize was launched in February with the goal of developing technology that can remove CO2 from the seas and the atmosphere.

Nov 18, 2021

Can Israel’s vaccine end the COVID-19 pandemic?

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The vaccine candidate was originally developed by the Israel Institute for Biological Research (IIBR), which operates under the auspices of the Prime Minister’s Office and works closely with the Defense Ministry.

The institute’s strategic and technical capabilities are shrouded in secrecy, but this week, The Jerusalem Post gained access to new data that show BriLife could be more effective against mutations and confer lasting immunity.


The Israeli vaccine could potentially address COVID better than other technologies, according to the CEO of NeuroRx.

Continue reading “Can Israel’s vaccine end the COVID-19 pandemic?” »

Nov 18, 2021

Israeli oral COVID vaccine heads to Mexico, aims to fast-track approval

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Oramed Pharmaceuticals, the developer of the Oravax oral COVID-19 vaccine candidate, has announced a partnership with Mexico’s Genomma Lab Internacional to help fast-track a Phase II clinical trial and gain emergency use authorization in the Latin American country.


Only about 58% of Mexico’s population has been jabbed with one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, averaging around 4,500 new cases per day.