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Feb 10, 2020
Fisherman found SpaceX Crew Dragon’s parachute compartment door in the ocean
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
Featured Image Source: David Stokes
SpaceX aims to launch NASA Astronauts to the International Space Station for the first time this year aboard their updated Dragon spacecraft, known as Crew Dragon. The spacecraft successfully conducted the most important safety test last month during an uncrewed In-Flight Abort (IFA) mission which tested the craft’s launch escape system capabilities. During the IFA test, engineers mimicked a real flight to space except that they purposely caused their Falcon 9 rocket to “malfunction” by shutting down its 9 Merlin 1D engines in order to trigger Dragon’s launch escape countdown. Falcon 9 aerodynamically exploded mid-air, as Dragon successfully ignited its 8 SuperDraco engines to escape the danger.
Feb 10, 2020
This robot excels at drawing human blood
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, health, robotics/AI
A new medical robot created specifically to take blood samples outperformed human health-care professionals in a clinical trial.
Feb 10, 2020
Researchers Discover Immune Cell That Could Kill Most Cancers
Posted by Paul Battista in category: biotech/medical
Feb 10, 2020
“Reverse fuel cell” converts waste carbon to valuable products at record rates
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: energy, engineering
Fuel cells turn chemicals into electricity. Now, a U of T Engineering team has adapted technology from fuel cells to do the reverse: harness electricity to make valuable chemicals from waste carbon (CO2).
“For decades, talented researchers have been developing systems that convert electricity into hydrogen and back again,” says Professor Ted Sargent (ECE), one of the senior authors of a paper published today in Science. “Our innovation builds on that legacy, but by using carbon-based molecules, we can plug directly into existing hydrocarbon infrastructure.”
In a hydrogen fuel cell, hydrogen and oxygen come together on the surface of a catalyst. The chemical reaction releases electrons, which are captured by specialized materials within the fuel cell and pumped into a circuit.
Feb 10, 2020
Chemistry in Coronavirus Research: A Free to Read Collection from the American Chemical Society
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry
ACS Publications is providing free access to articles related to the #coronavirus, in support of the on-going coronavirus outbreak relief efforts in #China.
View the Virtual Issue to access all available articles:
In light of the current outbreak of a novel coronavirus (2019–nCoV), ACS Publications would like to share this Virtual Issue that features a collection of articles on coronavirus research. Chemistry has a key role to play in understanding everything from viral structure to pathogenesis, isolation of vaccines and therapies, as well as in the development of materials and techniques used by basic researchers, virologists and clinicians. This Virtual Issue aims to provide a brief overview of the important contributions of chemistry to understanding and controlling the spread of coronaviruses and includes articles from„„, and as well as the preprint server ChemRxiv. We hope the research contained in this Virtual Issue will provide you with important insight into challenges and approaches in virus research.
Feb 10, 2020
A Plea to Save the Last Nuclear Arms Treaty
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: geopolitics, military, treaties
Two former diplomats, from Russia and America, call for extending the nuclear arms limitation pact called New START, to make the world more secure.
Feb 10, 2020
How America’s prisons and jails perpetuate the opioid epidemic
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: law enforcement
Feb 10, 2020
Where Computing Is Headed—Beyond Quantum
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: business, quantum physics, robotics/AI
To address the challenge, some startups are making chips focused on specific software tasks. Others are pushing further, finding processing and storage solutions in new materials, including synthetic DNA.
Quantum computing is the best-known of these new methods. Startups as well as tech giants including Alphabet Inc.’s Google and International Business Machines Corp. are developing quantum computers, which harness the properties of quantum physics to sort through a vast number of possibilities in nearly real time. The advent of quantum computing has paved the way for other experimental techniques, startup executives say.
The market for new computing technology comes as advancements in traditional chip making are hitting a physical limit under Moore’s Law, the idea that every two years or so, the number of transistors in a chip doubles.
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