Menu

Blog

Page 6353

Nov 20, 2020

Lift eFoil Electric Surfboard

Posted by in category: futurism

For those who like to surf without waves. 😃


Lift’s electric hydrofoil is a futuristic surfboard that lets you silently soar over the water 😍.

Nov 20, 2020

Sunflower Labs Home Security Drone

Posted by in categories: drones, security

You can now protect your home with this security drone! 😃


This security system deploys a drone when it senses intruders.

Nov 20, 2020

Let Your Robots Off The Leash – Or Lose: AI Experts

Posted by in categories: drones, military, robotics/AI

Its taking a bit more time for soldiers to adjust to their new drones.


  • Land Warfare, Networks / Cyber

Let Your Robots Off The Leash – Or Lose: AI Experts.

In DARPA-Army experiments, soldiers tried to micromanage their drones and ground robots, slowing their reaction times and restricting their tactics. Can AIs earn troops’ trust?

Nov 20, 2020

Getting it just right: The Goldilocks model of cancer

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, genetics, life extension

Senescence in cancer cells

~~~


Sometimes, too much of a good thing can turn out to be bad. This is certainly the case for the excessive cell growth found in cancer. But when cancers try to grow too fast, this excessive speed can cause a type of cellular aging that actually results in arrested growth. Scientists at Duke-NUS Medical School have now discovered that a well-known signaling pathway helps cancers grow by blocking the pro-growth signals from a second major cancer pathway.

Continue reading “Getting it just right: The Goldilocks model of cancer” »

Nov 20, 2020

Geometry Reveals How the World Is Assembled From Cubes

Posted by in categories: health, mathematics

An exercise in pure mathematics has led to a wide-ranging theory of how the world comes together.

Nov 20, 2020

Wind-powered, transatlantic car carrier planned for 2024

Posted by in categories: engineering, sustainability, transportation

In the near future, large vessels carrying vehicles or other cargo across the ocean could be powered by wind, thanks to innovative sail technology.

Oceanbird, designed by Swedish engineering company, Wallenius Marine, is a futuristic concept for a PCTC (Pure Car and Truck Carrier) with capacity to carry 7,000 cars on long-distance ocean journeys. The project aims to prove that the global shipping community can transport goods in a sustainable way, and that low or zero-emission shipping is possible by using wind as the main energy source.

“We are proud to present our third iteration of our design, which we have worked with for several years,” said Per Tunell, COO of Wallenius Marine. “Shipping is a central function in global trade and stands for 90% of all transported goods, but it also contributes to emissions. It is critical that shipping becomes sustainable. Our studies show that wind is the most interesting energy source for ocean transports and with the 80-metre-high wing sails on Oceanbird, we are developing the ocean-going freighters of the future.”

Nov 20, 2020

Drones Solve a Nuclear Waste Mystery at Chernobyl

Posted by in categories: drones, nuclear energy

In 2019, Switzerland-based Flyability had a mystery to solve at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Was nuclear waste still present in one of the plant’s decommissioned reactors?

“At the time of the disaster, the fifth block of the Chernobyl Plant was under construction and nearing completion,” a Flyability spokesperson said. “Given the rush to leave, there was no record of whether the holding pools in Reactor Five had ever received the depleted uranium fuel bars for which they had been made.”

Continue reading “Drones Solve a Nuclear Waste Mystery at Chernobyl” »

Nov 20, 2020

Galaxies Have Gotten Hotter – A Warming Predicted by Dark Matter Theory

Posted by in category: cosmology

Johns Hopkins University study of 10 billion years of microwaves reveals a warming predicted by dark matter theory.

Who says you can’t get hotter with age?

Researchers from Johns Hopkins University and other institutions have found that, on average, the temperature of galaxy clusters today is 4 million degrees Fahrenheit. That is 10 times hotter than 10 billion years ago, and four times hotter than the Sun’s outermost atmosphere called the corona. The findings are published in the Astrophysical Journal.

Nov 20, 2020

Earth is fighting a laser duel with the exploding Carina Nebula

Posted by in category: space

An epic photo shows the ESO’s Very large Telescope firing four orange lasers at a distant star system.

Nov 20, 2020

Giant virus genomes discovered lurking in DNA of common algae

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution

Viral stowaways could be enhancing survival of algae, and even their evolution.