Menu

Blog

Page 5492

Mar 18, 2021

“Meteorological Beast in Our Solar System” – Powerful Stratospheric Winds Measured on Jupiter for the First Time

Posted by in categories: climatology, space

“The most spectacular result is the presence of strong jets, with speeds of up to 400 meters per second, which are located under the aurorae near the poles,” says Cavalié. These wind speeds, equivalent to about 1450 kilometers an hour, are more than twice the maximum storm speeds reached in Jupiter’s Great Red Spot and over three times the wind speed measured on Earth’s strongest tornadoes.

“Our detection indicates that these jets could behave like a giant vortex with a diameter of up to four times that of Earth, and some 900 kilometers in height,” explains co-author Bilal Benmahi, also of the Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Bordeaux. “A vortex of this size would be a unique meteorological beast in our Solar System,” Cavalié adds.

Mar 18, 2021

Satellite start-up Capella Space aims to tap $60 billion intelligence market with new imagery

Posted by in categories: business, satellites

Satellite imagery specialist Capella Space on Thursday released the first images captured by its two latest spacecraft launched in January.

The firm is trying to tap part of an Earth intelligence market it estimates is worth about $60 billion.

Capella’s business is based on combining a special type of imagery with a small, inexpensive spacecraft. The company is building a network of satellites that can capture images of places on Earth multiple times a day.

Mar 18, 2021

Hear Perseverance drive! Raw and unfiltered from Mars 🔊

Posted by in category: space

Listen to Perseverance drive! Raw and unfiltered from Mars.


Perseverance captured audio while driving on the surface of Mars’ Jezero Crater on Sol 16. The raw and unfiltered recording has been combined here with imagery captured on the same sol. Full Story: https://www.space.com/perseverance-rover-sounds-driving-mars.

Continue reading “Hear Perseverance drive! Raw and unfiltered from Mars 🔊” »

Mar 18, 2021

Episode 42 — Neil DeGrasse Tyson Talks About His New Book “Cosmic Queries”

Posted by in category: alien life

Master communicator Neil DeGrasse Tyson is at his inimitable self in this new episode. We discuss everything from why space aliens might have a whole other set of senses than we humans and why moving to Mars might never work. Please have a listen.


Astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York City, discusses everything from pond scum to space aliens in this off-the-wall and very engaging episode. It’s vintage Tyson. We also touch on his latest book written with George Mason University physicist James Trefil — “Cosmic Queries: StarTalk’s Guide To Who We Are, How We Got Here, And Where We’re Going.”

Continue reading “Episode 42 --- Neil DeGrasse Tyson Talks About His New Book ‘Cosmic Queries’” »

Mar 18, 2021

Is the Schrödinger Equation True?

Posted by in categories: information science, mathematics

Just because a mathematical formula works does not mean it reflects reality.

Mar 17, 2021

Bottle-flipping robots

Posted by in categories: internet, robotics/AI

These robots have nailed bottle-flipping, proving not even internet challenges are safe from automation.

Mar 17, 2021

Roscosmos is more interested in creating a national orbital station, says CEO

Posted by in category: space travel

A fundamental decision on a new station would be made by the end of this year, he said.

Rogozin said that current negotiations with NASA on the future of the ISS were “shallow”. He speculated that ISS’s life cycle would be repeatedly prolonged not by several years, but by one year. Also, he said it might be possible to extend the service life not of the whole station, but of its individual modules.

“On the sidelines of the April 9 launch we plan to hold technical consultations with NASA,” Rogozin said, adding there was a possibility of configuring the Lunar orbital platform Gateway for its possible docking with Russia’s new generation spacecraft Oryol.

Mar 17, 2021

Abel Prize celebrates union of mathematics and computer science

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, internet, mathematics, science

Hungarian mathematician László Lovász and Israeli computer scientist Avi Wigderson will share the prize, worth 7.5 million Norwegian kroner (US$886000), “for their foundational contributions to theoretical computer science and discrete mathematics, and their leading role in shaping them into central fields of modern mathematics”, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced on 17 March.


The work of winners László Lovász and Avi Wigderson underpins applications from Internet security to the study of networks.

Mar 17, 2021

New perovskite design shows path to higher efficiency

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability

Restructuring the way perovskite solar cells are designed can boost their efficiency and increase their deployment in buildings and beyond, according to researchers with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).

Perovskite photovoltaic (PV) cells are made of layers of materials sandwiched together, with the top and bottom layers key to converting sunlight to electricity. The new for the cells increases the area exposed to the sun by putting the metal contact layers side-by-side on the back of the cell.

“Taking the materials on top away means you are going to have a higher theoretical efficiency because your perovskite is absorbing more of the sun,” said Lance Wheeler, a NREL scientist and lead author of a new paper, “Complementary interface formation toward high-efficiency all-back-contact .”

Mar 17, 2021

Propagation of microwave breakdown in argon induced by a 28 GHz gyrotron beam

Posted by in category: energy

An atmospheric argon discharge plasma was induced by a high-power microwave beam using a 28 GHz gyrotron and investigated at pressures of 40 kPa–100 kPa and Gaussian peak intensities of 0.115 GW/m2…