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Jan 12, 2021
GM shares hit record high as automaker reveals electric van and delves into flying cars
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: robotics/AI, sustainability, transportation
The potential foray into “personal air mobility” was announced as part of Cadillac’s portfolio of luxury and EV vehicles. It included an autonomous shuttle and an electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft, or more commonly known as a flying car or air taxi.
Michael Simcoe, vice president of GM global design, said each concept reflected “the needs and wants of the passengers at a particular moment in time and GM’s vision of the future of transportation.”
“This is a special moment for General Motors as we reimagine the future of personal transportation for the next five years and beyond,” Simcoe said.
Jan 12, 2021
NASA’s Plan to Stop an Asteroid Headed for Earth
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space
Jan 12, 2021
Brain Circuit That Encodes Timing of Events Identified
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: neuroscience
Summary: Pyramidal cells in the CA2 region of the hippocampus are responsible for storing critical timing information.
Source: MIT
When we experience a new event, our brain records a memory of not only what happened, but also the context, including the time and location of the event. A new study from MIT neuroscientists sheds light on how the timing of a memory is encoded in the hippocampus, and suggests that time and space are encoded separately.
Jan 12, 2021
The “Last Eden?” First Human Culture Lasted 20,000 Years Longer Than Thought
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: evolution
Some 11 thousand years ago, Africa’s furthest west harbored the last populations to preserve tool-making traditions first established by the earliest members of our species.
Fieldwork led by Dr. Eleanor Scerri, head of the Pan-African Evolution Research Group at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Germany and Dr. Khady Niang of the University of Cheikh Anta Diop in Senegal, has documented the youngest known occurrence of the Middle Stone Age. This repertoire of stone flaking methods and the resulting tools includes distinctive ways of producing sharp flakes by carefully preparing nodules of rock, some of which were sometimes further shaped into tool forms known as ‘scrapers’ and ‘points.’ Middle Stone Age finds most commonly occur in the African record between around 300 thousand and 30 thousand years ago, after which point they largely vanish.
It was long thought that these tool types were replaced after 30 thousand years ago by a radically different, miniaturized toolkit better suited to diversified subsistence strategies and patterns of mobility across Africa. In a paper published in Scientific Reports this week, Scerri and colleagues show that groups of hunter-gatherers in what is today Senegal continued to use Middle Stone Age technologies associated with our species’ earliest prehistory as late as 11 thousand years ago. This contrasts with the long-held view that humanity’s major prehistoric cultural phases occurred in a neat and universal sequence.
Jan 12, 2021
FAA clears the path for supersonic flight testing over US soil
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: business, government, transportation
There’s a new crop of supersonic aircraft beginning to sprout, thanks to advances in engine, materials and satellite weather tracking that will enable aircraft to break the sound barrier over land without the disruptive noise pollution of a sonic boom reaching the ground.
Aerion, Boom and Spike, for three examples, are working on supersonic business jets. Virgin Galactic is looking to bring the time savings of Mach 3 travel to a slightly broader passenger market. One of the issues, of course, is that supersonic flight has long been illegal over US soil, boomless cruise or no boomless cruise. But the US Government wants to set the regulatory agenda internationally, and has instructed the FAA to take a leadership role as the sector develops.
Supersonic flight over American soil will remain prohibited, but new regulations will streamline the process through which these companies can apply for specific exemptions, clearing away some of the red tape and offering a clear path for flight testing over land.
Jan 12, 2021
Scientists investigate phages that can kill the world’s leading superbug, Acinetobacter baumannii
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: biotech/medical
A major risk of being hospitalised is catching a bacterial infection.
Hospitals, especially areas including intensive care units and surgical wards, are teeming with bacteria, some of which are resistant to antibiotics —they are infamously known as ‘superbugs’.
Superbug infections are difficult and expensive to treat, and can often lead to dire consequences for the patient.
Jan 12, 2021
General Motors unveils EV van as part of new commercial business unit
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: business, transportation
The EV600 van will be the first vehicle under a new commercial business unit within GM called BrightDrop.
Jan 12, 2021
New quantum particle may have been accidentally discovered
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
Basically speaking, metals conduct electricity and insulators don’t. On the molecular level, that comes down to how freely electrons can move through the materials – in metals, electrons are very mobile, while insulators obviously have high resistance that prevents them moving much.
As a side effect of this, metals can exhibit a phenomenon known as quantum oscillations. When exposed to a magnetic field at very low temperatures, electrons can shift into a quantum state that causes the material’s resistivity to oscillate. This doesn’t happen in insulators, however, since their electrons don’t move very well.
Jan 12, 2021
A controversial trial to bring the dead back to life plans a restart
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Circa 2017 o.o
The trial plans to inject stem cells into the spinal cords of people declared clinically brain dead, with the ultimate goal of restarting brain activity.