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Dec 10, 2018
950-Mile-Long Cloud Spotted Over Martian Volcano. And It Has Staying Power
Posted by Alberto Lao in category: space
A mysterious white-colored plume extending some 950 miles (just over 1,500 kilometers) has been spotted on the leeward side of the Arsia Mons volcano on Mars.
Unlike other Martian cloud structures that seem to poof in and out of existence, this one has staying power, with the lengthy plume hovering near Arsia Mons since Sept. 13 and seen as recently as Nov. 12, according to the European Space Agency. The agency’s Mars Express camera has been recording images of the mountainous cloud.
“Montane clouds are very common on Mars, but it was the length of the cloud and its duration that makes it interesting,” said Francois Forget, a senior research scientist at the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Paris. “Usually, it is more localized to the volcano.” [The 7 Most Mars-Like Places on Earth].
Dec 10, 2018
NASA administrator: ‘The US is returning to the surface of the moon, and we’re doing it sooner than you think!’
Posted by Alberto Lao in categories: robotics/AI, space travel
A big announcement from NASA about landing on the moon is coming on Thursday.
- The last time NASA landed a spacecraft on the moon was in December 1972.
- The US space agency said it’s about to announce “moon partnerships” with American companies to return to the lunar surface.
- NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine claimed the new moon missions will occur “sooner than you think!”
- NASA is withholding details of the announcement until Thursday afternoon, but Business Insider has independently confirmed some information.
If NASA’s stunning landing of a car-sized robot on Mars didn’t already whet your appetite for space exploration this week, mark your calendar for 2 p.m. EST on Thursday.
That’s when NASA plans to give an update about a program that aims to land privately developed spacecraft on the moon.
Dec 10, 2018
A Review of Caloric Restriction, Fasting, and Time Restricted Feeding
Posted by Steve Hill in category: life extension
Today, we want to discuss this review published in the journal Science, as it provides a whistle-stop tour of caloric restriction, intermittent fasting, and time-restricted feeding.
There is a considerable amount of data supporting the effects of caloric restriction and similar dietary approaches on both health and lifespan in multiple species. In general, the more simple the organism, the greater the observed effect tends to be, although the effect is less so in longer-lived organisms. For example, caloric restriction has a significant effect on mouse lifespan, but it appears to do little, if anything, to the lifespan of humans.
Why is this? One explanation could be that, as humans, we have already evolved efficient repair systems that more thoroughly address the damages of aging than the repair systems of mice and other short-lived species. In other words, there is little improvement to be made to human repair systems compared to those of mice.
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Dec 10, 2018
MIT Interactive Robotics Laboratory
Posted by Richard Darienzo in categories: futurism, robotics/AI
Dec 10, 2018
Physics Suggests That Our Dreams Might Be Glimpses Of Other Dimensions
Posted by Victoria Generao in categories: cosmology, physics
If you have ever looked into the ‘many world’s theory’ you know that the world we live in is quite possibly one of many. Regardless of the multiverse hypotheses, you choose to follow/look into each one is truly fascinating for a number of reasons.
Basically, most of them touch on how there are many different worlds, universes, dimensions, or whatever you would like to call them. Each one the same as our own but also different in some way. For instance, in another world, you might be living the same life as you are now but perhaps politics had gone in a different direction. Maybe all of the presidents that were elected here in the US were opposite from how they are in our world. Maybe everything is the same except for you have different colored hair? The differences between worlds could be minuscule or extreme, it all varies.
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Dec 10, 2018
Artificial synapses made from nanowires
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: biological, nanotechnology
Scientists from Jülich together with colleagues from Aachen and Turin have produced a memristive element made from nanowires that functions in much the same way as a biological nerve cell. The component is able to save and process information, as well as receive numerous signals in parallel. The resistive switching cell made from oxide crystal nanowires is thus an ideal candidate for use in building bioinspired “neuromorphic” processors, able to take over the diverse functions of biological synapses and neurons.
Dec 10, 2018
Solution for next generation nanochips comes out of thin air
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: computing, space travel
Researchers at RMIT University have engineered a new type of transistor, the building block for all electronics. Instead of sending electrical currents through silicon, these transistors send electrons through narrow air gaps, where they can travel unimpeded as if in space.
Dec 10, 2018
Lack of sunspots to bring record cold, warns NASA scientist
Posted by Victoria Generao in category: space
“It could happen in a matter of months,” says Martin Mlynczak of NASA’s Langley Research Center. ________________
“The sun is entering one of the deepest Solar Minima of the Space Age,” wrote Dr Tony Phillips just six weeks ago, on 27 Sep 2018.
Sunspots have been absent for most of 2018 and Earth’s upper atmosphere is responding, says Phillips, editor of spaceweather.com.
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