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Jul 14, 2021

Google’s foldable Pixel phone will reportedly have an ultra thin glass layer

Posted by in category: mobile phones

Google is reportedly working on a foldable Pixel phone that will feature an ultra thin glass layer on top of the foldable display.

Jul 14, 2021

5 Times Animals Inspired Better Drugs

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Scientists have been turning to the animal world for inspiration for a long time, including for medicines. And many different types of animals have been responsible for this inspiration, including sharks, spiders, and… roadkill.

Hosted by: Michael Aranda.

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Jul 14, 2021

Delta Aquariids: How, when, and when to watch this marvelous summer shower

Posted by in category: futurism

The annual meteor shower peaks on July 29.


The annual Delta Aquariids meteor shower kicks off from July 12 to August 23 each year, peaking on July 29.

Jul 14, 2021

Acoustic Tractor Beam Can Grab Objects From Behind Obstacles

Posted by in categories: holograms, tractor beam

An acoustic tractor beam that can bend sound around an obstacle to levitate an object on the other side has been created by researchers in the UK. Dubbed SoundBender, the device combines an ultrasound transducer array with an acoustic metamaterial.

In recent years, researchers have used transducer arrays to build sonic tractor beams that can create complex acoustic holograms to manipulate objects in mid-air. Acoustic metamaterials are engineered materials with structural properties that do not usually occur naturally. They have been used to produce acoustic holograms, bend beams of sound and create static acoustic levitation devices. But the team behind the SoundBender, based at the University of Sussex, say that these technologies have key limitations.

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Jul 14, 2021

Device taps brain waves to help paralyzed man communicate

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, neuroscience

In a medical first, researchers harnessed the brain waves of a paralyzed man unable to speak — and turned what he intended to say into sentences on a computer screen.

It will take years of additional research but the study, reported Wednesday, marks an important step toward one day restoring more natural communication for people who can’t talk because of injury or illness.

“Most of us take for granted how easily we communicate through speech,” said Dr. Edward Chang, a neurosurgeon at the University of California, San Francisco, who led the work. “It’s exciting to think we’re at the very beginning of a new chapter, a new field” to ease the devastation of patients who lost that ability.

Jul 14, 2021

Google tries out error correction on its quantum processor

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Two options for error correction both work, but current hardware limits them.

Jul 14, 2021

Apple won a Major Patent for an ‘Integrated Photonics Device’ that could be used in a Future Apple Watch for Monitoring Blood Glucose+

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, futurism

Today the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office officially granted Apple a patent that relates to an integrated photonics device. Apple is working with a UK Photonics company that supplies specialized components for the smartwatch market. One medical network publication believes that Apple is working with this UK company on a blood glucose solution.

Jul 14, 2021

Faster Physics: How AI and NVIDIA A100 GPUs Automate Particle Physics

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics, robotics/AI

Circa 2020


What are the fundamental laws that govern our universe? How did the matter in the universe today get there? What exactly is dark matter?

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Jul 14, 2021

New evidence of an anomalous phase of matter brings energy-efficient technologies closer

Posted by in categories: energy, quantum physics

Researchers have found evidence for an anomalous phase of matter that was predicted to exist in the 1960s. Harnessing its properties could pave the way to new technologies able to share information without energy losses. These results are reported in the journal Science Advances.

While investigating a quantum material, the researchers from the University of Cambridge who led the study observed the presence of unexpectedly fast waves of energy rippling through the material when they exposed it to short and intense laser pulses. They were able to make these observations by using a microscopic speed camera that can track small and very fast movement on a scale that is challenging with many other techniques. This technique probes the material with two light pulses: the first one disturbs it and creates waves—or oscillations—propagating outward in concentric circles, in the same way as dropping a rock into a pond; the second light pulse takes a snapshot of these waves at various times. Put together, these images allowed them to look at how these waves behave, and to understand their ‘speed limit.’

“At , these waves move at a hundredth of the speed of light, much faster than we would expect in a normal material. But when we go to higher temperatures, it is as if the pond has frozen,” explained first author Hope Bretscher, who carried out this research at Cambridge’s Cavendish Laboratory. “We don’t see these waves moving away from the rock at all. We spent a long time searching for why such bizarre behavior could occur.”

Jul 14, 2021

Kepler Seems to Have Detected a Bunch of Rogue Planets Drifting Through The Galaxy

Posted by in category: alien life

When a star is born, the leftover dust and gas in the cloud from which it formed doesn’t just sit there. It clumps together, forming other cosmic objects — asteroids and comets and meteors and, yes, exoplanets. We’ve detected many of these exoplanets in orbit around alien stars in the Milky Way.

But not all exoplanets stay put. Some get gravitationally kicked away from their parent star, to wander the galaxy, cold and alone. These are less easy to detect — but, after careful combing through data from NASA’s planet-hunting Kepler space telescope, astronomers think they’ve found some.

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