Menu

Blog

Page 5554

Mar 28, 2021

Mars Helicopter Ingenuity unlocked from Perseverance Rover

Posted by in category: space

https://youtube.com/watch?v=xInLmHqWoqk

On March 27, 2021 NASA’s Perseverance Rover unlocked Mars Helicopter Ingenuity (release system unlocked) and started deployment process. As for now, NASA’s rover prepares to get the Helicopter upright. Flight scheme is known. Before Ingenuity takes its first flight on Mars, it must be squarely in the middle of its airfield – a 33-by-33-foot (10-by-10-meter) patch of Martian real estate chosen for its flatness and lack of obstructions. Once the helicopter and rover teams confirm that Perseverance is situated exactly where they want it to be inside the airfield, the elaborate process to deploy the helicopter on the surface of Mars begins.

Credit: nasa.gov, NASA/JPL-Caltech, NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU

Continue reading “Mars Helicopter Ingenuity unlocked from Perseverance Rover” »

Mar 28, 2021

Evidence of a brand new physics?

Posted by in category: particle physics

Physicists at the LHCb Collaboration at CERN have found particles not behaving the way they should according to the guiding theory of particle physics. Could it be evidence of a brand new physics?

Mar 28, 2021

Turning Wood Into Recyclable, Biodegradable Plastic

Posted by in categories: chemistry, sustainability

Plastics are one of the world’s largest polluters, taking hundreds of years to degrade in nature. A research team, led by YSE professor Yuan Yao and Liangbing Hu from the University of Maryland, has created a high-quality bioplastic from wood byproducts that they hope can solve one of the world’s most pressing environmental issues.

Efforts to shift from petrochemical plastics to renewable and biodegradable plastics have proven tricky — the production process can require toxic chemicals and is expensive, and the mechanical strength and water stability is often insufficient. But researchers have made a breakthrough, using wood byproducts, that shows promise for producing more durable and sustainable bioplastics.

A study published in Nature Sustainability, co-authored by Yuan Yao, assistant professor of industrial ecology and sustainable systems at Yale School of the Environment (YSE), outlines the process of deconstructing the porous matrix of natural wood into a slurry. The researchers say the resulting material shows a high mechanical strength, stability when holding liquids, and UV-light resistance. It can also be recycled or safely biodegraded in the natural environment, and has a lower life-cycle environmental impact when compared with petroleum-based plastics and other biodegradable plastics.

Mar 28, 2021

Telomere Length: How Does it Compare Against Other Biological Age Metrics?

Posted by in categories: biological, life extension

Here’s my latest video!


Papers referenced in the video:

Continue reading “Telomere Length: How Does it Compare Against Other Biological Age Metrics?” »

Mar 28, 2021

Protein Transport in Peroxisome

Posted by in category: futurism

Protein Transport in Peroxisomes.

#peroxisomes #protein Transport

Continue reading “Protein Transport in Peroxisome” »

Mar 28, 2021

Making air taxis a reality

Posted by in category: transportation

Joby Avaiation could be the first to make air taxis a reality. The company is one of the most experienced companies trying to bring urban air taxis to the mainstream. Here’s the first look at its eVTOL. https://cnet.co/2Qp0YcV

Mar 28, 2021

Mars’ Massive Olympus Mons Volcano Still Puzzles Planetary Scientists

Posted by in categories: futurism, space

As a future Mars tourist attraction, Olympus Mons is unlike anything else in the solar system.

Mar 27, 2021

Visiting the Farm of the Future

Posted by in categories: climatology, sustainability

Amid population growth and a changing climate, we meet the food producers doing more with less.

Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com.

Continue reading “Visiting the Farm of the Future” »

Mar 27, 2021

Covid-19 Variant Rages in Brazil, Posing Global Risk

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

A new Covid-19 variant from the Amazon is now responsible for the majority of new infections in Brazil, with many doctors there saying they are seeing more young and otherwise healthy patients falling ill. Hopefully Covid doesnt bounce back and turn into the 1918 flu.


“We’re in the trenches here, fighting a war,” said Andréia Cruz, a 42-year-old emergency-ward nurse in the southern Brazilian city of Porto Alegre. In the past three weeks alone, the surrounding state of Rio Grande do Sul has seen nearly 5000 people die from Covid-19, more than in the final three months of last year.

The spread of the virus in Brazil threatens to turn this country of 213 million into a global public-health hazard. The so-called P.1 strain, present in more than 20 countries and identified in New York last week, is up to 2.2 times more contagious and as much as 61% more able to reinfect people than previous versions of the coronavirus, according to a recent study.

Continue reading “Covid-19 Variant Rages in Brazil, Posing Global Risk” »

Mar 27, 2021

UAE explained: How Abu Dhabi’s new quantum computer could help solve the mysteries of science

Posted by in categories: business, computing, quantum physics, science

Once particularly useful future application, according to Harvard Business Review, will be the potential development of new drugs, a task it is “uniquely suited for” because it would operate on the same laws of quantum physics as the molecules it is simulating.

And so, Abu Dhabi has joined the community of nations endeavouring to accomplish this next step in human history.

The Advanced Technology Research Council is building the computer at its Quantum Research Centre labs in Abu Dhabi, in collaboration with Barcelona-based Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech.