Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 447
Jan 1, 2022
2021: a year physicists asked, ‘What lies beyond the Standard Model?’
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: physics, space
If you ask a physicist like me to explain how the world works, my lazy answer might be: “It follows the Standard Model.”
The Standard Model explains the fundamental physics of how the universe works. It has endured over 50 trips around the sun despite experimental physicists constantly probing for cracks in the model’s foundations.
With few exceptions, it has stood up to this scrutiny, passing experimental test after experimental test with flying colors. But this wildly successful model has conceptual gaps that suggest there is a bit more to be learned about how the universe works.
Jan 1, 2022
Elon Musk’s Banner Year: Milestones on Earth and in Space
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: economics, Elon Musk, internet, space, sustainability
This year, billionaire CEO Elon Musk reached several milestones across Tesla, SpaceX and Starlink. WSJ reporters Rebecca Elliott and Micah Maidenberg break down some of his biggest moments in 2021 and what’s to come in 2022. Illustration: Tom Grillo.
In-Depth Features.
A global look at the economic and cultural forces shaping our world.
Dec 31, 2021
Iran space launch fails to put payloads into orbit: Official
Posted by Muhammad Furqan in categories: education, space
Iran’s space launch on Thursday has failed to put its three payloads into orbit after the rocket was unable to reach the required speed, a defence ministry spokesman said in remarks carried on state television.
The attempted launch, which came as indirect United States-Iran talks take place in Austria to try to salvage a 2015 nuclear deal, drew criticism from the US, Germany and France.
Continue reading “Iran space launch fails to put payloads into orbit: Official” »
The space rock (7482) 1994 PC1, which is more than twice the height of the Empire State Building, will whiz by our planet on Jan. 18.
🌱 🤓 This week I helped with the latest experiment going on in the International Space Station plant habitat which cultivates several cotton genotypes. Each of these petri dishes contains undifferentiated masses of cotton cells known as a calli. Cotton is highly resistant to the process of plant regeneration, making it difficult to engineer stable, reproducing plants that have specific or enhanced traits such as drought resistance. The investigation could provide a better understanding of this behavior and could ultimately improve our ability to grow crop plants on Earth and in space.
Photo credit: Mark Vande Hei.
Dec 31, 2021
The latest robots and technologies of the future: all the technology news for December in one issue!
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: augmented reality, drones, Elon Musk, robotics/AI, space
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=li_nX7jFsFQ
You are on the PRO Robots channel and in this video we present to you the news digest for December 2021. New robots, the most realistic humanoid robot in the world, luxury flying cars of the future, xenobots — nanorobots that have learned to reproduce, nanochip for reprogramming living matter, drones with legs, universal robots, robotic cleaners, flying humanoids, Neuralink chip testing on people, new smart augmented reality glasses, the launch of the telescope, which will tell about the evolution of the universe, and much more in one release! All the most interesting high-tech news for December in one release. Watch the video till the end and write in comments, which news interested you most of all? And what areas of science and technology we should cover in the next issues?
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Dec 31, 2021
SUNSHIELD OPENING DAY! — James Webb Tracker! #NASA #WEBB
Posted by Claudio Soprano in categories: engineering, physics, space
James Webb Tracker! #NASA #WEBB
#JWST #NASA #JamesWebbLaunch.
LIMITED EDITION Launch Commemorative Shirt — www.etsy.com/shop/TheLaunchPadShop.
James Webb Space Telescope launched on Saturday, Dec 25 at 12:20 UTC from Guiana Space Centre. Webb Telescope liftoff aboard Ariane 5 rocket.
Continue reading “SUNSHIELD OPENING DAY! — James Webb Tracker! #NASA #WEBB” »
Dec 30, 2021
A Supercar Designer Just Unveiled a 250-Mph Flying Hypercar
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: space
It will allegedly fly almost 300 miles on a single charge and fit in a single garage space.
Dec 30, 2021
“A True Cosmic Monster!” Violent High-Frequency Oscillations Captured in Gigantic Eruption of a Neutron Star
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: robotics/AI, space
An international scientific group with outstanding Valencian participation has managed to measure for the first time oscillations in the brightness of a neutron star – magnetar – during its most violent moments. In just a tenth of a second, the magnetar released energy equivalent to that produced by the Sun in 100,000 years. The observation has been carried out automatically, without human intervention, thanks to the Artificial Intelligence of a system developed at the Image Processing Laboratory (IPL) of the University of Valencia.
Among the neutron stars, objects that can contain half a million times the mass of the Earth in a diameter of about twenty kilometers, stands out a small group with the most intense magnetic field known: magnetars. These objects, of which only thirty are known, suffer violent eruptions that are still little known due to their unexpected nature and their duration of barely tenths of a second. Detecting them is a challenge for science and technology.