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Jun 25, 2024

SpaceX successful with booster replacement on Starlink mission

Posted by in categories: internet, satellites

SpaceX was back at the launch pad Sunday with an updated rocket to finish off a Starlink mission it tried to send up earlier this month.

A Falcon 9 on the Starlink 10–2 lifted off at 1:15 p.m. from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s Space Launch Complex 40 amid cloudy skies with 22 more Starlink satellites for the company’s growing internet constellation that now numbers more than 6,100 satellites in orbit.

The launch came nine days since SpaceX last attempted to knock out the mission on June 14. That attempt had a rare scrub as the reached 0 and the rocket was ultimately brought back from the pad to allow for last week’s ASTRA 1P satellite launch to go up instead.

Jun 25, 2024

Moon And Saturn Align As ‘Space Clouds’ Shine: The Night Sky This Week

Posted by in category: space

Best seen with the naked eye or a pair of binoculars, delicate NLCs are visible at this time of year because they’re being lit by the sun, which sets yet never gets far below the horizon.

Ideally placed in the night sky this month is M13, the “Great Globular Cluster in Hercules.” A spectacular sight in binoculars or a small telescope, the closest and the brightest globular cluster—as seen from the northern hemisphere—is about 25,000 light-years distant.

Jun 25, 2024

Antarctic Ice Hides 40-Million-Year-Old River System

Posted by in category: futurism

Beneath the Antarctic ice, scientists find remnants of a giant river system that flowed for thousands of miles.

By Kristel Tjandra & LiveScience

Geologists digging into the massive ice sheet of West Antarctica have discovered the remains of an ancient river system that once flowed for nearly a thousand miles.

Jun 25, 2024

NASA’s Perseverance Mars Rover Unlocks the Geologic Mysteries of Bright Angel

Posted by in category: space

Perseverance rover recently arrived at Bright Angel, a notable site on Mars distinguished by its light-toned rocks, situated at the edge of the ancient Neretva Vallis river channel.

Last week, NASA ’s Perseverance Mars rover arrived at the long-awaited site of Bright Angel, named for being a light-toned rock that stands out in orbital data. The unique color here, as well as the surface characteristics and location on the edge of the ancient river channel Neretva Vallis, made Bright Angel a location of interest for the Mars 2020 Science Team.

Initial Observations and Data Collection.

Jun 25, 2024

AI needs design consciousness

Posted by in categories: ethics, robotics/AI

My thoughts on ethics and human-centric design in AI advancements.

Jun 25, 2024

Impact of device scaling on the electrical properties of MoS2 field-effect transistors

Posted by in categories: computing, materials

Scientific Reports — Impact of device scaling on the electrical properties of MoS2 field-effect transistors.

Jun 25, 2024

‘Out of control fires’ in Brazil wetlands spark state of emergency

Posted by in category: futurism

Regional authorities in Brazil on Monday declared a state of emergency as the Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical wetlands, faces “out of control fires,” according to a decree.

The surge of fires before the peak of the dry season has raised alarm for the Pantanal, which extends into Bolivia and Paraguay and is home to a rich array of wildlife, including the world’s highest density of jaguars.

The six-month was declared by the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, home to much of the wetlands in Brazil.

Jun 25, 2024

Long-Term Mortality, Recovery, and Vocational Status After a Maternal StrokeRegister-Based Observational Case-Control Study

Posted by in category: futurism

This register-based, case-control, follow-up study explores long-term mortality, recovery, and vocational status after a maternal stroke:


Background and Objectives.

Jun 25, 2024

China returns samples from the moon’s far side in historic 1st (video)

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space travel

The lunar material touched down in China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region early Tuesday morning (June 25).

Jun 25, 2024

Could we launch resources from the moon with electromagnetic railguns?

Posted by in categories: economics, military, space

That was five decades ago. Catapult yourself to today and ask this question: What’s the U.S. Navy’s Gerald R. Ford nuclear aircraft carrier got to do with the moon?

Late last year, General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems filed a final report to the Air Force Office of Scientific Research’s (AFOSR). That report was titled “Lunar Electromagnetic Launch for Resource Exploitation to Enhance National Security and Economic Growth.”

The author of that appraisal is Robert Peterkin, director of operations for the organization’s Albuquerque, New Mexico office.

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