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Feb 15, 2021

Who Should Stop Unethical A.I.?

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

At artificial-intelligence conferences, researchers are increasingly alarmed by what they see.

Feb 15, 2021

NEW Mars Rover Landing — Everything You Need to Know

Posted by in category: space

Feb 15, 2021

Light and a Single Electron Used to Detect Quantum Information Stored in 100,000 Nuclear Quantum Bits

Posted by in categories: internet, quantum physics

Researchers unlocked the electronic properties of graphene by folding the material like origami paper.


Researchers have found a way to use light and a single electron to communicate with a cloud of quantum bits and sense their behavior, making it possible to detect a single quantum bit in a dense cloud.

The researchers, from the University of Cambridge, were able to inject a ‘needle’ of highly fragile quantum information in a ‘haystack’ of 100000 nuclei. Using lasers to control an electron, the researchers could then use that electron to control the behavior of the haystack, making it easier to find the needle. They were able to detect the ‘needle’ with a precision of 1.9 parts per million: high enough to detect a single quantum bit in this large ensemble.

Continue reading “Light and a Single Electron Used to Detect Quantum Information Stored in 100,000 Nuclear Quantum Bits” »

Feb 15, 2021

Scientists Use Lithium To Control Heat In Nuclear Fusion Reactors

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, particle physics

Researchers unlocked the electronic properties of graphene by folding the material like origami paper.


Researchers at the US Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory have created a plan using liquid lithium to control the extreme heat that could strike the exhaust system inside tokamak fusion reactors.

Continue reading “Scientists Use Lithium To Control Heat In Nuclear Fusion Reactors” »

Feb 15, 2021

Researchers explore using light to levitate discs in the mesosphere

Posted by in category: futurism

A team of researchers at the University of Pennsylvania has found that it is possible to levitate very thin discs in conditions that mimic the mesosphere using laser light. In their paper published in the journal Science Advances, the group describes their research involving a possible way to allow flight at very high altitudes and how well it worked.

Feb 15, 2021

Microalgae identified as clean source of hydrogen production

Posted by in categories: chemistry, energy, engineering

Researchers unlocked the electronic properties of graphene by folding the material like origami paper.


Researchers at Monash University’s Department of Chemical Engineering, IITB-Monash Research Academy Mumbai, and The Indian Institute of Technology’s Department of Chemical Engineering have used reactive flash volatilisation (RFV) gasification technology to produce hydrogen using microalgae, giving rise to newer and cleaner forms of energy.

Feb 15, 2021

1 Gigawatt Solar + Storage Plant Planned For France

Posted by in category: energy

A giant 1 gigawatt (1000 megawatt) solar-plus-storage project is currently planned for France. Engie, one of the world’s biggest energy companies, and Neoen, a large French power producer, are planning to build this project together near the small French town of Saucats. The project’s name is Horizeo.

Feb 15, 2021

Toyota claims the 2021 Mirai fuel-cell car cleans the air, calls it “minus emissions”

Posted by in categories: energy, transportation

The 2021 Toyota Mirai claims to have better than zero-emissions by filtering the outside air, but it ignores the emissions of hydrogen sourcing.

Feb 15, 2021

New skin patch promises comprehensive health monitoring

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, engineering, health, nanotechnology, wearables

“” This type of wearable would be very helpful for people with underlying medical conditions to monitor their own health on a regular basis,” co-first author of the study Lu Yin said in a news release.

New wearable device converts body heat into electricity.
“It would also serve as a great tool for remote patient monitoring, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic when people are minimizing in-person visits to the clinic,” Yin, a nano-engineering doctoral student at the University of California, San Diego.

In addition to monitoring chronic conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure, as well as pinpointing the onset of sepsis, the patch could help predict people at risk of becoming severely ill with COVID-19.

Continue reading “New skin patch promises comprehensive health monitoring” »

Feb 15, 2021

FAA gives approval to ‘flying car’ that reaches altitude of 10,000 feet

Posted by in category: transportation

Able to reach 100 mph and an altitude of 10000 feet, the Transition has a range of about 400 miles It has a 27-foot wingspan but the wings fold up, allowing it to be parked in a single-car garage.