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Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 19

May 6, 2024

LimX Dynamics Unveils Bipedal Robot’s Locomotion Skills in Forest Terrain

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

LimX Dynamics, a leading Chinese company in general-purpose robotics, has recently shared an exciting update on its latest innovation — the P1 bipedal robot. The company released a video showcasing the remarkable locomotion capabilities of the P1 as it navigates through a dense forest terrain. This significant milestone highlights the robot’s agility and adaptability in challenging environments.

Advanced Learning Techniques.

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May 4, 2024

Using Artificial Intelligence To Think Outside The Box

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

Innovation often arises out of serendipitous relationships or discoveries. Can AI do that?

May 4, 2024

Fusion Breakthrough: Compact New Device Reaches Temperatures of 37 Million Degrees

Posted by in categories: innovation, nuclear energy

In the nine decades since humans first produced fusion reactions, only a few fusion technologies have demonstrated the ability to make a thermal fusion plasma with electron temperatures hotter than 10 million degrees Celsius, roughly the temperature of the core of the sun. Zap Energy’s unique approach, known as a sheared-flow-stabilized Z pinch, has now joined those rarefied ranks, far exceeding this plasma temperature milestone in a device that is a fraction of the scale of other fusion systems.

A new research paper, published this month in Physical Review Letters, details measurements made on Zap Energy’s Fusion Z-pinch Experiment (FuZE) of 1–3 keV plasma electron temperatures — roughly the equivalent of 11 to 37 million degrees Celsius (20 to 66 million degrees Fahrenheit). Due to the electrons’ ability to rapidly cool a plasma, this feat is a key hurdle for fusion systems and FuZE is the simplest, smallest, and lowest cost device to have achieved it. Zap’s technology offers the potential for a much shorter and more practical path to a commercial product capable of producing abundant, on-demand, carbon-free energy to the globe.

“These are meticulous, unequivocal measurements, yet made on a device of incredibly modest scale by traditional fusion standards,” describes Ben Levitt, VP of R&D at Zap. “We’ve still got a lot of work ahead of us, but our performance to date has advanced to a point that we can now stand shoulder to shoulder with some of the world’s pre-eminent fusion devices, but with great efficiency, and at a fraction of the complexity and cost.”

May 3, 2024

New heart monitor mimics sea turtle anatomy for better sensitivity

Posted by in category: innovation

Researchers from China create an innovative T-shaped heart monitor inspired by sea turtles that can pick up on low frequency vibrations.

May 3, 2024

Near-perfect quantum teleportation achieved by harnessing noise

Posted by in categories: innovation, quantum physics

Researchers achieve near-perfect quantum teleportation despite disruptive noise, marking a significant breakthrough in quantum communication.

May 3, 2024

How Artificial Intelligence Is Making 2,000-Year-Old Scrolls Readable Again

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

The innovative “Vesuvius Challenge” unlocked a mystery that had confounded archeologists for centuries.

May 3, 2024

UK’s 1st waterless hydro-energy storage to offer 2.5 times more power

Posted by in categories: energy, innovation

UK startup is set to develop innovative waterless hydro energy storage system, addressing limitations of traditional hydro power.

May 3, 2024

A Remarkable New Thruster Could Achieve Escape Velocity—and Interplanetary Travel

Posted by in categories: innovation, space travel

Scientists are on the brink of a propulsion breakthrough.

May 3, 2024

Decades in the Making: Laser Excites Atomic Nucleus in Groundbreaking Discovery

Posted by in categories: innovation, physics

For the first time, lasers have successfully excited the “thorium transition,” a process long pursued by researchers. This breakthrough sets the stage for groundbreaking advancements in high-precision technologies, such as nuclear clocks.

Physicists have eagerly anticipated this breakthrough: scientists globally have spent years searching for a specific state of thorium atomic nuclei that could lead to groundbreaking technological advancements.

It could be used, for example, to build an nuclear clock that could measure time more precisely than the best atomic clocks available today. It could also be used to answer completely new fundamental questions in physics – for example, the question of whether the constants of nature are actually constant or whether they change in space and time.

May 1, 2024

It may be time to eliminate the best-before date on food packaging, say smart packaging researchers

Posted by in categories: food, innovation

The inventors of a suite of tests that enable food packages to signal whether their contents are contaminated are working to bring producers and regulators together to get their inventions into commercial products, with the goal of preventing illness and reducing food waste.

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