GPR-1 under pilot control doing some basic sortation.
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Jul 31, 2021
Simulating worlds on the GPU
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in category: computing
This post delves into the implementation of my procedural earth simulation, written entirely in GLSL fragment shaders. It simulates the complete history of an earth-like planet in a few minutes, with the simulation updating at 60 frames per second.
Jul 31, 2021
Acoustic tweezers can pick up objects without physical contact
Posted by Future Timeline in categories: biological, chemistry, particle physics
Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have developed a new technology which allows non-contact manipulation of small objects using sound waves. They used a hemispherical array of ultrasound transducers to generate a 3D acoustic field that stably trapped and lifted a small polystyrene ball from a reflective surface. Their technique employs a method similar to laser trapping in biology, but adaptable to a wider range of particle sizes and materials.
The ability to move objects without touching them might sound like magic, but in the world of biology and chemistry, technology known as optical trapping has been helping scientists use light to move microscopic objects around for many years. In fact, half of the 2018 Nobel Prize for Physics, awarded to Arthur Ashkin (1922–2020) was in recognition of the remarkable achievements of this technology. But the use of laser light is not without its failings, particularly the limits placed on the properties of the objects which can be moved.
Enter acoustic trapping, an alternative that uses sound instead of optical waves. Sound waves may be applied to a wider range of object sizes and materials, and successful manipulation is now possible for millimeter-sized particles. Though they haven’t been around for as long as their optical counterparts, acoustic levitation and manipulation show exceptional promise for both lab settings and beyond. But the technical challenges that need to be surmounted are considerable. In particular, it is not easy to individually and accurately control vast arrays of ultrasound transducers in real time, or to get the right sound fields to lift objects far from the transducers themselves, particularly near surfaces that reflect sound.
Jul 31, 2021
Dietary CD38 Inhibitors: Are They Correlated With Biological Age?
Posted by Mike Lustgarten in categories: biological, food, life extension
Apigenin, quercetin, luteolin data: USDA Database for the Flavonoid.
Content of Selected Foods.
https://www.ars.usda.gov/arsuserfiles/80400525/data/flav/flav_r03-1.pdf.
Kuromanin data: http://phenol-explorer.eu/contents/polyphenol/9
Continue reading “Dietary CD38 Inhibitors: Are They Correlated With Biological Age?” »
Jul 31, 2021
Pupil size surprisingly linked to differences in intelligence
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: neuroscience
Maybe eyes really are windows into the soul — or at least into the brain, as a new study finds.
Jul 31, 2021
Dad builds robotic exoskeleton to help son walk — BBC News
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, robotics/AI
Every dad should do this. 😃
French dad and robotics engineer Jean-Louis Constanza has built a robotic suit for his 16-year-old son Oscar that allows him to walk.
Continue reading “Dad builds robotic exoskeleton to help son walk — BBC News” »
Jul 31, 2021
Look: 14 stunning images show Mars in all its glory
Posted by Atanas Atanasov in categories: Elon Musk, space
In the world of space exploration, all eyes are on the Red Planet.
Billionaires like Elon Musk still envision Mars as a future home for human civilizations.
All eyes are on the red planet. Here’s a look back at some of the best images ever taken, from rovers like Perseverance to orbiters like Mars Express.
Jul 30, 2021
Zaha Hadid Architects creates unreinforced 3D-printed concrete bridge at Venice
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: materials
Amazing.
Zaha Hadid Architects and ETH Zurich have built a 3D-printed concrete footbridge named Striatus in Venice that is freestanding and assembled without mortar.
Named Striatus, the 16-metre-long bridge was built by the computation and design team at Zaha Hadid Architects, known as ZHACODE, in collaboration with the Block Research Group (BRG) at Swiss university ETH Zurich, incremental3D and Holcim. It was constructed from 53 hollow blocks each printed from 500 layers of printed concrete.
Continue reading “Zaha Hadid Architects creates unreinforced 3D-printed concrete bridge at Venice” »
Jul 30, 2021
Japan Wants to Build Intercontinental Passenger Spaceships by the Early 2040s
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: military, space travel
What do you think?
The idea of using spaceships to travel from one point on the Earth’s surface to another has been around since at least the 1960s, but the cost and complexity of the idea have meant it’s been little more than a pipe dream.
In principle, the approach isn’t that different from the one used by intercontinental ballistic missiles. A rocket is used to blast the payload, be it a nuclear weapon or a passenger spaceship, on a big looping trajectory into space before re-entering the atmosphere on the other side of the planet.
Continue reading “Japan Wants to Build Intercontinental Passenger Spaceships by the Early 2040s” »
Jul 30, 2021
New particle discovered at CERN is a long-lived double charmer
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in category: particle physics
Physicists at CERN have discovered an exotic new particle that’s quite charming. Known as Tcc+, the particle belongs to a rare class called tetraquarks, and its unusual composition makes it the longest-lived exotic hadron found so far.
Matter is made up of fundamental particles called quarks, which come in six “flavors”: up, down, strange, charm, top and bottom. These quarks group together in different ways to make up different types of matter – baryons like protons and neutrons are made up of several quarks, while mesons are formed from quarks paired with antiquarks, their antimatter equivalents.
Baryons are usually comprised of two or three quarks, but exotic baryons made up of four or five have been discovered in recent years, after being theorized for decades. Tcc+ is one of these unusual particles with four quarks, known as a tetraquark.