Aug 29, 2020
Troops To Test AFRL’s THOR Drone Killer This Fall
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: drones, electronics
THOR puts high-powered microwaves to fry drone swarms’ electronics in a rugged and deployable package.
THOR puts high-powered microwaves to fry drone swarms’ electronics in a rugged and deployable package.
The Defense Department expects to stand up its first battalion of Stryker vehicles outfitted with high-powered laser weapons by some time next year, Army officials say.
“Expect to have the first battalion fielded in 2021 with four battalions by 2023,” U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command chief Lt. Gen. Dan Karbler told the audience at the virtual Space Missile Defense symposium on Tuesday.
The so-called “laser battalion,” as Defense One described it, would eventually deploy the new 50 kw Directed Energy-Maneuver Short-Range Air Defense (DE-MSHORAD) Stryker that the Army is working to field by 2022, a ten-fold power increase over the 5 kw-class system that artillery soldiers have been testing in Germany since early 2018.
Gertrude the pig is a prototype of a brain-to-machine interface.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0ZJh8wfGVs&feature=youtu.be
Quick recap of Neuralink’s update event.
Han from WrySci HX goes over the main points of Elon Musk’s Neuralink Presentation. More below ↓↓↓
Continue reading “Elon Musk Neuralink Presentation: 4 Main Takeaways in 4 Minutes” »
https://youtube.com/watch?v=OyVGiJacQqI
The tactic has become widespread on battlefields overseas and now appears to be proliferating to organized crime.
Up to three launches planned this weekend from Cape Canaveral – Spaceflight Now.
Delays have set up the possibility of up to three rocket launches this weekend from different pads along Florida’s Space Coast, including two SpaceX missions on Sunday that could set a company record for the shortest span between two Falcon 9 rocket launches.
But in the world of ever-changing launch schedules, numerous factors such as weather and technical issues could thwart launch plans this weekend.
Continue reading “Up to three launches planned this weekend from Cape Canaveral” »
Sixty feet beneath the surface of the Caribbean Sea, aquanaut Fabien Cousteau and industrial designer Yves Béhar are envisioning the world’s largest underwater research station and habitat.
The pair have unveiled Fabien Cousteau’s Proteus, a 4,000-square-foot modular lab that will sit under the water off the coast of Curaçao, providing a home to scientists and researchers from across the world studying the ocean — from the effects of climate change and new marine life to medicinal breakthroughs.
Designed as a two-story circular structure grounded to the ocean floor on stilts, Proteus’ protruding pods contain laboratories, personal quarters, medical bays and a moon pool where divers can access the ocean floor. Powered by wind and solar energy, and ocean thermal energy conversion, the structure will also feature the first underwater greenhouse for growing food, as well as a video production facility.
“If people don’t have money in their pockets, then this type of economy that we have can’t work,” says Wharton professor Mauro Guillén.