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Jun 17, 2021
Research collaborations bring big rewards: the world needs more
Posted by Derick Lee in category: biotech/medical
This special issue of Nature shines a spotlight on collaborations in science today, particularly in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. It reveals that such cooperation, although complex, is thriving in many ways. It is clearly essential, both to the progress of research and for the betterment of society. But, at the same time, international collaboration is under pressure, partly as a result of geopolitical tensions. And science’s historical conventions continue to hinder such team-based working.
The other is the initiative created in Flint. Lewis is a community activist and now principal investigator at the Flint Center for Health Equity Solutions. Sadler is a geographer at Michigan State University. They draw lessons from how researchers and members of the community worked together to identify where diseases were concentrated. It’s a frank account that also flags the fact that some scientists discounted and overlooked ideas from communities, and raises the injustice of work that saves lives not necessarily meeting the ‘excellence’ criteria needed to progress in academic institutions.
These are clearly testing times for collaboration. The stories and data show that there is still some way to travel before all parts of the research enterprise recognize the true value of working across borders, cultures and disciplines.
Continue reading “Research collaborations bring big rewards: the world needs more” »
Jun 17, 2021
Dynamic history of the inner core constrained by seismic anisotropy
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: futurism
The inner core underwent preferential equatorial growth and translation after nucleation ~0.5–1.5 billion years ago, according to an analysis of its seismic anisotropy and self-consistent geodynamic simulations.
Jun 17, 2021
Correlated charge noise and relaxation errors in superconducting qubits
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
Cosmic-ray particles and γ-rays striking superconducting circuits can generate qubit errors that are spatially correlated across several millimetres, hampering current error-correction approaches.
Jun 17, 2021
Symmetry-enforced topological nodal planes at the Fermi surface of a chiral magnet
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: materials, transportation
Measurements on a chiral magnet show that non-symmorphic symmetries enforce topological crossings exactly at the Fermi level in certain materials; these crossings can be controlled by an applied magnetic field.
Jun 17, 2021
Researchers Uncover Process Ghosting — A New Malware Evasion Technique
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: cybercrime/malcode
Jun 17, 2021
Molerats Hackers Return With New Attacks Targeting Middle Eastern Governments
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: finance, government, military
A Middle Eastern advanced persistent threat (APT) group has resurfaced after a two-month hiatus to target government institutions in the Middle East and global government entities associated with geopolitics in the region in a rash of new campaigns observed earlier this month.
Sunnyvale-based enterprise security firm Proofpoint attributed the activity to a politically motivated threat actor it tracks as TA402, and known by other monikers such as Molerats and GazaHackerTeam.
The threat actor is believed to be active for a decade, with a history of striking organizations primarily located in Israel and Palestine, and spanning multiple verticals such as technology, telecommunications, finance, academia, military, media, and governments.
Jun 17, 2021
A New Spyware is Targeting Telegram and Psiphon VPN Users in Iran
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: surveillance
A spyware in a 6-year-old Ferocious Kitten covert surveillance campaign now targets Telegram and Psiphon VPN users in Iran.
Jun 17, 2021
SpaceX launches advanced GPS satellite for US Space Force, sticks rocket landing at sea
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: satellites
It’s SpaceX’s 19th rocket launch (and landing) of the year.
All of this is great news for SpaceX, as the company has been relying heavily on its fleet of veteran rockets, with many Falcon 9 first stages having racked up five or more flights each.
Out of 19 missions so far this year, only one has featured a brand new Falcon 9; the rest were on flight-proven boosters.
Jun 17, 2021
Physicists used LIGOs mirrors to approach a quantum limit
Posted by Lawrence Klaes in category: quantum physics
Using LIGO’s laser beams to reduce jiggling rather than detect gravitational waves, scientists have gotten closer to the realm of quantum mechanics.