This week:
đ A milestone for NASAâs Orion Spacecraft đ A commercial lunar payload update đ©đŸâđ« More honors for a historic icon.
These are a few of the stories to tell you about on the latest episode of This Week at NASA:
This week:
đ A milestone for NASAâs Orion Spacecraft đ A commercial lunar payload update đ©đŸâđ« More honors for a historic icon.
These are a few of the stories to tell you about on the latest episode of This Week at NASA:
It sounds like science fiction: a device that can reconnect a paralyzed personâs brain to his or her body. But thatâs exactly what the experimental NeuroLife system does. Developed by Battelle and Ohio State University, NeuroLife uses a brain implant, an algorithm and an electrode sleeve to give paralysis patients back control of their limbs. For Ian Burkhart, NeuroLifeâs first test subject, the implications could be life-changing.
Featured in this episode:
Batelle:
https://www.battelle.org/
Ohio State University
Commentary: Private investors are excited about renewable sources like solar and wind, but they need to focus on energy storage going forward.
These robotic tiles can track your every step to create an immersive VR experience via çæłąć€§ćŠïœUniversity of Tsukuba.
At first, the scientists wondered whether it was a mistake.
Just 21 days after leaving the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen, an arctic fox had arrived in Greenland. And in less than three months, it made it to Canada. The fox averaged nearly 30 miles a day (50 kilometers) â some days, though, it walked almost 100 (160 kilometers).
âWhen it started happening, we thought âis this really true?ââ said Arnaud Tarroux, one of the researchers who tracked the female fox. Was there âan error in the data?â
Jason Shulman photographs entire movies with ultra-long exposures, creating impressionist photo masterpieces in the process.
Main image: The Wizard of Oz (1939)Photograph: Jason Shulman courtesy the artist and Cob Gallery.
If we loved the deep sea as much as deep space, we might not have so many environmental problems.
Millions of solar panels clustered together to form an island could convert carbon dioxide in seawater into methanol, which can fuel airplanes and trucks, according to new research from Norway and Switzerland and published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal, PNAS, as NBC News reported. The floating islands could drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and dependence on fossil fuels.
Manâs best friend isnât a dogâitâs a doglike robot, designed to perform tricks and tug at your heartstrings.