Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 312

Sep 7, 2022

Look! Astronomers explore the Orion Nebula’s radiation-scorched cloud

Posted by in category: space

Gargantuan young stars blast this region with ultraviolet radiation, and that may play a key role in how solar systems eventually form.

Sep 7, 2022

Here’s where YC’s latest batch of founders are placing fintech bets

Posted by in categories: finance, space

Y Combinator’s latest cohort of founders have opinions on the future of fintech. One-fifth of the accelerator’s Summer 2022 batch, which spans 240 companies, is working on solving issues in the financial space. The pitches range from building the Square for micro-merchants in Latin America to creating a way to angel invest in your favorite athlete.

And while the pitches are diverse, some concentrations show key ways that a group of vetted entrepreneurs are thinking about the landscape’s shift in light of finicky venture markets, a downturn, and some public market meltdowns. The most popular problem area among this batch’s fintech cohort has to do with payments, which is unsurprising. The story really begins with which focus made second place: neobanks.

Sep 7, 2022

Sunspot turning towards Earth is so big it’s changing how the sun vibrates

Posted by in category: space

Scientists have detected a sunspot that’s so huge it’s changing the way our sun vibrates.

Sunspots appear as dark blotches on the sun’s surface because they are cooler than the surrounding areas. They form where magnetic fields are particularly strong, driven by the electrically charged gases that constantly swirl inside our nearest star.

Sometimes these magnetic fields can be so intense that they prevent some heat from reaching the surface, forming a sunspot.

Sep 7, 2022

Advanced Metamaterials

Posted by in categories: internet, media & arts, space

A look at revolutionary new materials with seemingly impossible properties.
Start protecting your internet experience today with 77% off a 3 year plan by using code ‘ISAAC’ at http://www.NordVPN.com/ISAAC
Metamaterials offer many properties normally not found in nature, from superior lenses and communications to stealth applications, potentially offering invisibility. Today we’ll examine the science behind that and look at many other possible applications.

AMA thread tonight (Thursday March 29) at 6 PM EST over at /r/space on reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/space/comments/881rbl/ama_this_is_i…_anything/

Continue reading “Advanced Metamaterials” »

Sep 7, 2022

How the best alternative to “quantum spookiness” failed

Posted by in categories: information science, quantum physics, space

For all of history, there’s been an underlying but unspoken assumption about the laws that govern the Universe: If you know enough information about a system, you can predict precisely how that system will behave in the future. The assumption is, in other words, deterministic. The classical equations of motion — Newton’s laws — are completely deterministic. The laws of gravity, both Newton’s and Einstein’s, are deterministic. Even Maxwell’s equations, governing electricity and magnetism, are 100% deterministic as well.

But that picture of the Universe got turned on its head with a series of discoveries that began in the late 1800s. Starting with radioactivity and radioactive decay, humanity slowly uncovered the quantum nature of reality, casting doubt on the idea that we live in a deterministic Universe. Predictively, many aspects of reality could only be discussed in a statistical fashion: where a set of probable outcomes could be presented, but which one would occur, and when, could not be precisely established. The hopes of avoiding the necessity of “quantum spookiness” was championed by many, including Einstein, with the most compelling alternative to determinism put forth by Louis de Broglie and David Bohm. Decades later, Bohmian mechanics was finally put to an experimental test, where it failed spectacularly. Here’s how the best alternative to the spooky nature of reality simply didn’t hold up.

Sep 7, 2022

This Is Why Quantum Mechanics Isn’t Enough To Explain The Universe

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, space

Going to smaller and smaller distance scales reveals more fundamental views of nature, which means if we can understand and describe the smallest scales, we can build our way to […].

Sep 6, 2022

Look! Stunning new Webb image of the Tarantula Nebula is an early Halloween treat

Posted by in categories: food, space

Space spiders eat the space insects in your house.


James Webb Space Telescope’s newest infrared images reveal star formation in the Tarantula Nebula and may shed light on nebulae in the early universe.

Sep 6, 2022

China launches mysterious new spy satellite

Posted by in category: space

It was the country’s 35th successful rocket launch this year.

China’s space agency, the China National Space Administration (CNSA) continues its impressive launch cadence for this year with its latest launch. The agency launched a mystery spy satellite that may gather military intelligence for the country, a report from Space.com reveals.

The satellite, called Yaogan 33, launched atop China’s Long March 4C rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the Gobi Desert at 7:44 pm (23:44 GMT) on Friday, September 2.

Continue reading “China launches mysterious new spy satellite” »

Sep 6, 2022

Asteroids near Earth: are we in danger?

Posted by in category: space

Are near-Earth objects a threat to Earth?

An asteroid is a metallic or rocky body that orbits the Sun within the asteroid belt, a region of space between Mars and Jupiter.

Continue reading “Asteroids near Earth: are we in danger?” »

Sep 6, 2022

SpaceX Starlink user who took $600 internet dish on Greek sailing vacation says the service was ‘surprisingly good’ despite outages

Posted by in categories: internet, space

Starlink user says Starlink’s connectivity was “surprisingly good” despite some outages when the yacht turned or surrounded by masts in a harbor.

Page 312 of 1,015First309310311312313314315316Last