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Sep 22, 2020

First experimental evidence of a new type of dark boson possibly found

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics

It prevents galaxies from flying apart.


Two experiments hunting for a whisper of a particle that prevents whole galaxies from flying apart recently published some contradictory results. One came up empty handed, while the other gives us every reason to keep on searching.

Dark bosons are dark matter candidates based on force-carrying particles that don’t really pack much force.

Sep 21, 2020

15 Amazing Technologies That Are Contributing To The Greater Good

Posted by in categories: business, innovation

From business to leisure to everything in between, technology can make our lives easier and more enjoyable. Further, tech can also be used to promote the common good and make a positive impact on humanity. When an innovation can do both, it’s something truly special and important that deserves our attention.

As industry leaders, the members of Forbes Technology Council stay on top of current trends and developments, including the most exciting and impactful new technology out there. Below, 15 of them share the coolest products and services they’ve seen that are making a real difference in the world.

Sep 21, 2020

Tony Hawk Rides World’s First Real Hoverboard — Hendo Hover

Posted by in category: transportation

:3circa 2015


Read The Article Here: http://theridechannel.com/features/2014/11/tony-hawk-rides-hoverboard

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Sep 21, 2020

Carbon nanotubes developed for super efficient desalination

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, sustainability

Membrane separations have become critical to human existence, with no better example than water purification. As water scarcity becomes more common and communities start running out of cheap available water, they need to supplement their supplies with desalinated water from seawater and brackish water sources.

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) researchers have created (CNT) pores that are so efficient at removing salt from water that they are comparable to commercial desalination membranes. These tiny pores are just 0.8 nanometers (nm) in diameter. In comparison, a human hair is 60,000 nm across. The research appears on the cover of the Sept. 18 issue of the journal Science Advances.

The dominant technology for removing salt from water, , uses thin-film composite (TFC) membranes to separate water from the ions present in saline feed streams. However, some fundamental performance issues remain. For example, TFC membranes are constrained by the permeability-selectivity trade-offs and often have insufficient rejection of some ions and trace micropollutants, requiring additional purification stages that increase the energy and cost.

Sep 21, 2020

Water purifier sucks salt out of water like a mangrove tree

Posted by in category: sustainability

A new device that takes salt out of water gets its inspiration from the subtropical mangrove tree.


The device up close. (Credit: Yale)

In addition to offering a better understanding of plants’ plumbing systems, it could lead to new desalination technologies, the researchers say.

Sep 21, 2020

NASA Found Another Way Into Nuclear Fusion

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, particle physics, space

O,.o.


NASA has unlocked nuclear fusion on a tiny scale, with a phenomenon called lattice confinement fusion that takes place in the narrow channels between atoms. In the reaction, the common nuclear fuel deuterium gets trapped in the “empty” atomic space in a solid metal. What results is a Goldilocks effect that’s neither supercooled nor superheated, but where atoms reach fusion-level energy.

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Sep 21, 2020

ROCKUBOT bacteria-killing robot

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

This bacteria-killing robot can sanitize your hotel bed.

Sep 21, 2020

Tesla’s Future Battery Might Use Diamonds, Could Transform The Industry

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, nanotechnology

How about a battery that can generate enough electricity to power an EV for years without ever needing to be recharged?


Will Elon Musk and crew will be unveiling a nano-diamond-battery on Tuesday? It’s fun to imagine the limitless possibilities. But, it really could happen.

Sep 21, 2020

The Universal Mind Revealed as a Multi-Layered Quantum Neural Network

Posted by in categories: mathematics, particle physics, quantum physics, robotics/AI

In the sixties of the previous century, the science of Cybernetics emerged, which its founder Norbert Wiener defined as “the scientific study of control and communication in the animal and the machine.” Whereas the cyberneticists perhaps saw everything in the organic world too much as a machine type of regulatory network, the paradigm swapped to its mirror image, wherein everything in the natural world became seen as an organic neural network. Indeed, self-regulating networks appear to be ubiquitous: From the subatomic organization of atoms to the atomic organization of molecules, macromolecules, cells and organisms, everywhere the equivalent of neural networks appears to be present.

#EvolutionaryCybernetics #CyberneticTheoryofMind #PhilosophyofMind #QuantumTheory #cybernetics #evolution #consciousness

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Sep 21, 2020

Saturn’s ocean moon Enceladus has fresh ice in unexpected place

Posted by in category: space

Enceladus may be even more interesting than we thought.


Saturn’s geyser-spewing moon Enceladus may be even more active than scientists had thought.