Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 288
Dec 8, 2022
Why 21 cm is the magic length for the Universe
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: quantum physics, space
Photons come in every wavelength you can imagine. But one particular quantum transition makes light at precisely 21 cm, and it’s magical.
Dec 8, 2022
“Dynamic Soaring” Could See Interstellar Probes Reach Super Speeds
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: chemistry, energy, space
Covering interstellar distances in a human lifetime is far from easy. Going at 1 percent of the speed of light, it would take over 400 years to reach the closest star, and we have not been able to propel any spacecraft even close to that speed. But a new method aims to get to those speeds and maybe more – and it takes inspiration from the mighty albatross.
Chemical propulsion can be very useful in achieving high speeds pretty quickly, but there’s the drawback in that you need to carry the fuel with you, which means you need to be able to generate more thrust to shift the extra fuel and so on. It’s a huge issue when it comes to rocket science. A realistic alternative is ion propulsion, used to slowly and successfully maneuver the Dawn spacecraft, but it would take an equally long time to reach enough speed with such a steady but small acceleration.
Solar sails hold a more intriguing possible approach. Proposals such as the Breakthrough Starshot see lasers used to massively accelerate a spacecraft the size of a credit card to one-fifth the speed of light. But, you need to build a very powerful laser. A similar method using sunlight might also work, although not up to such a high speed.
Dec 8, 2022
Building blocks for life may be able to form in radioactive meteorites
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: chemistry, space
Amino acids have been found in meteorites, and now an experiment shows how they might have been created by chemical reactions in these space rocks.
Artemis I will be the first in a series of increasingly complex missions to build a sustained human presence at the Moon for decades to come.
Dec 7, 2022
See The New Website That Simulates An Asteroid Strike In Your Hometown
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: materials, space
The asteroid strike simulation website lets users customize material, size, and speed then witness the destruction, in the name of science.
Dec 7, 2022
The Universe Is Actually a Strange Superfluid Liquid
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: space
Scientists have been trying to understand the nature of the cosmos for hundreds of years. Recent technological advances have allowed scientists to gain more insight into the world and have led to new hypotheses regarding how it all works.
Some seem plausible while others are crazy. We’ll be discussing two of the most bizarre, but intriguing, hypotheses about the construction of our cosmos.
How is the cosmos organized the way it is? This topic has been studied by scientists over the years. They have proposed many theories to explain how it works and what is ahead.
Dec 7, 2022
Astronomers trace powerful gamma rays to a never-before-seen stellar phenomenon
Posted by Atanas Atanasov in categories: energy, space
But a team including Zhang has a suggestion for what might have caused it: the merger of a neutron star not with another neutron star, as is common for short gamma ray bursts, but with a white dwarf. White dwarfs are larger than neutron stars, but not nearly as big as the massive stars that cause supernovae, which would account for the length and intensity of the unusual burst.
Since there are lots of white dwarf-neutron star binaries and events like this are rare enough that it’s the first to be observed in half a century of looking, he suggests it needs some qualifications: first, the white dwarf needs to be “close to the upper mass limit,” and afterwards the two need to merge into a rapidly-spinning magnetar, which would “inject additional energy into the kilonova.”
Dec 7, 2022
Daily Crunch: Lensa AI can transform Photoshopped fakes into nonconsensual pornography
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: robotics/AI, space
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Why, hello there, and welcome to your Tuesday Daily Crunch. I’ll be your host this week while Haje works from an undisclosed location where day is night and night is day. If you aren’t enjoying today’s Found podcast about tampons, we hope you at least saw stars at the TC Sessions: Space event. Let’s dig into some news! — Christine.
Dec 7, 2022
NASA’s Mars Ingenuity helicopter just flew higher than ever before
Posted by Gemechu Taye in category: space
Many believed Ingenuity would not soar to such heights.
NASA achieved a historic first in April last year when it performed the first-ever controlled flight of an aircraft on Mars. The Ingenuity helicopter, which hitched a ride to Mars aboard NASA’s Perseverance rover, was designed as a proof-of-concept craft that was only expected to fly a total of five times.
Now, the Mars helicopter has achieved flight no. 35, and it has set a new altitude record in the process, reaching a height of 14 meters (46 feet) above the red planet’s surface, NASA announced on Twitter.
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