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Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 231

Jul 27, 2022

The levitating Evaro Lightbulb Teardrop lamp will instantly capture attention in any interior space

Posted by in categories: innovation, space

Jul 26, 2022

Physics Mystery Solved: Findings Could “Revolutionize” Our Understanding of Distance

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, space

According to traditional thinking, distorting a flat space by bending it or stretching it is necessary to create a curved space. A group of scientists at Purdue University has developed a new technique for making curved spaces that also provides the answer to a physics mystery. The team has developed a method using non-Hermiticity, which occurs in all systems coupled to environments, to build a hyperbolic surface and a number of other prototypical curved spaces without causing any physical distortions of physical systems.

“Our work may revolutionize the general public’s understanding of curvatures and distance,” says Qi Zhou, Professor of Physics and Astronomy.

“It has also answered long-standing questions in non-Hermitian quantum mechanics by bridging non-Hermitian physics and curved spaces. These two subjects were assumed to be completely disconnected. The extraordinary behaviors of non-Hermitian systems, which have puzzled physicists for decades, become no longer mysterious if we recognize that the space has been curved. In other words, non-Hermiticity and curved spaces are dual to each other, being the two sides of the same coin.”

Jul 26, 2022

Look: New images reveal Mars canyon’s stunning depths

Posted by in category: space

The European Space Agency released new images of one of the deepest regions on the planet from its Mars Express orbiter.


ESA’s Mars Express orbiter imaged the stunning depths of Mars’ Valles Marineris, a gaping crevasse that is miles deeper than Earth’s Grand Canyon.

Jul 26, 2022

Physics, Life Sciences, and Dragon Cargo Transfer Top Tuesday’s Task List for Crew

Posted by in categories: physics, space

The Expedition 67 crewmembers aboard the International Space Station spent Tuesday predominantly on research, maintenance, and cargo transfer operations.

Research beneficial to humans on Earth and future crews in space is happening around the clock aboard the orbiting laboratory. NASA Flight Engineer Kjell Lindgren used a majority of his day to service samples for the Immunosenescence investigation inside the Life Science Glovebox. Results from this study may one day inform treatments for accelerated aging processes commonly observed in microgravity and contribute to countermeasures for normal aging progression.

Jul 26, 2022

China launches a 23-ton space station module to orbit aboard a Long March 5B rocket

Posted by in category: space

Jul 26, 2022

Mars rocks photographed today give a glimpse into a fascinating world

Posted by in category: space

Jul 26, 2022

Russia will withdraw from the International Space Station after 2024

Posted by in category: space

Jul 26, 2022

Intel to produce Taiwanese company MediaTek’s chips

Posted by in categories: business, computing, space

OAKLAND, Calif. July 25 (Reuters) — U.S. chipmaker Intel Corp (INTC.O) said on Monday it will produce chips for Taiwan’s MediaTek Inc (2454.TW), one of the world’s largest chip design firms.

The manufacturing arrangement is one of the most significant deals Intel has announced since it launched its so-called foundry business early last year.

A foundry business builds chips that other companies design and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) (2330.TW) is the top player in that space. Intel has mainly built chips it designed itself.

Jul 26, 2022

The Webb Telescope will drop everything to observe the next interstellar object

Posted by in category: space

In 2017 and 2018, scientists spotted the first two interstellar objects ever recorded in our Solar System. JWST could tell us more about them.

Jul 25, 2022

Voyagers 1 and 2 Take Embedded Computers into Interstellar Space

Posted by in categories: computing, space

The July issue of Scientific American magazine has a terrific review of the Voyager space mission that details the trips Voyagers 1 and 2 have made through the Solar System. The article is titled “Record-Breaking Voyager Spacecraft Begin to Power Down.” Both spacecraft have now entered interstellar space and are the first human artifacts to do so. Tim Folger wrote the article for Scientific American. Towards the end of the article, Folger points out that Voyagers 1 and 2 were designed before the advent of the microprocessor and that the mission has lasted 44 years, so far, which is about 40 years longer than the planned design life for the spacecraft.

The article then quotes Stamatios Krimigis, a PhD physicist and space scientist who’s spent more than half a century at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory. Krimigis says, “The amount of software on these instruments is slim to none. On the whole, I think the mission lasted so long because almost everything was hardwired. Today’s engineers don’t know how to do this. I don’t know if it’s even possible to build such a simple spacecraft [now]. Voyager is the last of its kind.”

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