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Mar 22, 2021

Yoav Landsman, Co-Founder, Moonscape — Sustainable And Responsible Lunar Services And Transportation

Posted by in categories: business, education, engineering, satellites, sustainability

Sustainable and responsible lunar services and transportation — yoav landsman, co-founder, moonscape.


Yoav Landsman is the Co-founder of Moonscape (https://www.moonscape.space/), a lunar services and payload transportation company, that is focused on providing necessary services like communication relay and cutting-edge imaging, while delivering payloads to the Moon.

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Mar 22, 2021

Towards the end of deep learning and the beginning of AGI

Posted by in categories: neuroscience, robotics/AI

How recent research points the way towards defeating adversarial examples and achieving a more resilient, consistent and flexible A.I.


How recent neuroscience research points the way towards defeating adversarial examples and achieving a more resilient, consistent and flexible form of artificial intelligence.

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Mar 22, 2021

After 50-Year International Hunt, Physicists Discover Mythical Odderon Particle

Posted by in category: particle physics

For 50 years, the research community has been hunting unsuccessfully for the so-called Odderon particle. Now, a Swedish-Hungarian research group has discovered the mythical particle with the help of extensive analysis of experimental data from the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Switzerland.

In 1973, two French particle physicists found that, according to their calculations, there was a previously unknown quasi-particle. The discovery sparked an international hunt.

The Odderon particle is what briefly forms when protons collide in high-energy collisions, and in some cases do not shatter, but bounce off one another and scatter. Protons are made up of quarks and gluons, that briefly form Odderon and Pomeron particles.

Mar 22, 2021

ICON and NASA bring lunar infrastructure closer with world’s first 3D printed rocket pad

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, space

Texas-based construction company ICON has delivered what it hails as the “world’s first” 3D printed lunar launch and landing pad to NASA, bringing its goal of creating an off-world construction system for the moon a step closer.

Working with a team of students from 10 colleges and universities across the US, ICON used its proprietary technology to 3D print a reusable landing pad using materials found on the moon. The partners recently conducted a static fire test of the rocket pad with a rocket motor at Camp Swift, a Texas Military Department location just outside of Austin.

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Mar 22, 2021

Action potentials induce biomagnetic fields in carnivorous Venus flytrap plants

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, neuroscience, quantum physics

“Previously reported detection of plant biomagnetism, which established the existence of measurable magnetic activity in the plant kingdom, was carried out using superconducting-quantum-interference-device (SQUID) magnetometers1, 5, 16. Atomic magnetometers are arguably more attractive for biological applications, since, unlike SQUIDs34, 35, they are non-cryogenic and can be miniaturized to optimize spatial resolution of measured biological features14, 15, 36. In the future, the SNR of magnetic measurements in plants will benefit from optimizing the low-frequency stability and sensitivity of atomic magnetometers. Just as noninvasive magnetic techniques have become essential tools for medical diagnostics of the human brain and body, this noninvasive technique could also be useful in the future for crop-plant diagnostics—by measuring the electromagnetic response of plants facing such challenges as sudden temperature change, herbivore attack, and chemical exposure.”


Upon stimulation, plants elicit electrical signals that can travel within a cellular network analogous to the animal nervous system. It is well-known that in the human brain, voltage changes in certain regions result from concerted electrical activity which, in the form of action potentials (APs), travels within nerve-cell arrays. Electro-and magnetophysiological techniques like electroencephalography, magnetoencephalography, and magnetic resonance imaging are used to record this activity and to diagnose disorders. Here we demonstrate that APs in a multicellular plant system produce measurable magnetic fields. Using atomic optically pumped magnetometers, biomagnetism associated with electrical activity in the carnivorous Venus flytrap, Dionaea muscipula, was recorded. Action potentials were induced by heat stimulation and detected both electrically and magnetically.

Mar 22, 2021

Why Do We Age? 4 Theories of Aging

Posted by in category: life extension

Scientists don’t actually agree on why we age (which I find a little wild), but there are a number of competing theories of aging.

I dug into 4 of the most representative and current. Any ones you’d add?:


Why do we age? Lots of theories have tried to explain the aging process, but the truth is scientists still don’t agree on a single reason.

Mar 22, 2021

Astronomer makes navigation system for interstellar space travel

Posted by in category: space travel

Interstellar travel has always caught the imagination of humankind. Though our scientific knowledge and imagination have long conceptualised interstellar space travel, actual travel is a massive undertaking. Till date, only two spacecraft (Voyager 1 and 2) have crossed the solar system boundary. More spacecraft will surely follow in future.

The main issue in interstellar travel is that a person aboard the spacecraft sees a different starscape than that from Earth. The astronaut will see position and movement of stars differently than on Earth.

Mar 22, 2021

The Air Force Has Released the First New Images of the B-21 Raider in Nearly Four Years

Posted by in category: transportation

The mysterious Raider will be the Air Force’s first new bomber in more than 30 years.


The U.S. Air Force and Northrop Grumman have released the first new image of the B-21 Raider bomber in nearly four years. The image, designed to show the plane in hangars at air bases across the country, shows a few more details of the stealthy bomber. According to aviation experts, the new plane looks like the B-2 bomber—with some key differences.

The three images show the plane sitting in hangars at Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota, Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, and Dyess Air Force Base in Texas. Ellsworth and Dyess are currently home to B-1B Lancer bombers, while Whiteman is home to America’s fleet of B-2A Spirit bombers. The B-21 Raider will eventually replace both types.

Mar 22, 2021

Mountain Bike With Radical Suspension

Posted by in categories: futurism, transportation

A future bike. 😃


This mountain bike’s suspension nails bumpy landings and enhances performance.

Mar 22, 2021

Why doesn’t the sound of a rocket kill you?

Posted by in category: futurism

During a rocket launch, the sound energy produced by the engines is strong enough to seriously damage anything in close proximity.