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Mar 1, 2021

Decarbonizing US Energy: An Aggressive Market-Driven Model for Fusion Power Development

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, economics, engineering

National Academies study says fusion can help decarbonize US energy, calls for public-private approach to pilot plant operation by 2035–40.

Electricity generated by fusion power plants could play an important role in decarbonizing the U.S. energy sector by mid-century, says a new consensus study report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, which also lays out for the first time a set of technical, economic, and regulatory standards and a timeline for a U.S. fusion pilot plant that would begin producing energy in the 2035–40 time frame.

To achieve this key step toward commercialization, the report calls for an aggressive public-private effort to produce by 2028 a pilot plant design that can, when built, accommodate any of the developmental approaches seeking to realize fusion’s potential as a safe, carbon-free, on-demand energy source.

Mar 1, 2021

Perseverance Seen From Space

Posted by in category: space

The ESA’s Trace Gas Orbiter (part of the ExoMars 2020 mission) has revealed images of the Perseverance rover and where it landed.


A little over a week ago (February 18th, 2021), NASA’s Perseverance rover landed in the Jezero crater on the surface of Mars. In what was truly a media circus, people from all over the world tuned to watch the live coverage of the rover landing. When Perseverance touched down, it wasn’t just the mission controllers at NASA who triumphantly jumped to their feet to cheer and applaud.

In the days that followed, the world was treated to all kinds of media that showed the surface of Mars and the descent. The most recent comes from the Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), which is part of the ESA-Roscosmos ExoMars program. From its vantage point, high above the Martian skies, the TGO caught sight of Perseverance in the Jezero crater and acquired images that show the rover and other elements of its landing vehicle.

Continue reading “Perseverance Seen From Space” »

Mar 1, 2021

Hyper-accurate positioning is rolling out worldwide

Posted by in category: satellites

Upgrades to satellites in orbit and systems down below will bring centimeter-level accuracy to the masses.

Mar 1, 2021

World’s Richest Men, Musk and Bezos, Fight Over Satellite Fleets

Posted by in category: futurism

Elon will win.


The world’s two richest men are duking it out before U.S. regulators over celestial real estate for their satellite fleets.

Mar 1, 2021

Does Water on Mars = Life? | Countdown to Mars

Posted by in category: alien life

Mars is on the outer boundary of our solar system’s habitable zone, meaning it’s a region where liquid water could form and exist for long periods of time. We know that water is the source of life on Earth, but could it also point to the same on Mars?

Watch the NASA’s Perseverance Mars Rover touch down on Mars LIVE on our TikTok TODAY starting at 3:15P ET! http://tiktok.com/@discovery

Feb 28, 2021

Do telomere length tests really reveal your biological age?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

Curiosity about how well our bodies are ageing has fuelled an industry around telomere length tests, but the much touted “biological clock” in our DNA isn’t what we thought.

Feb 28, 2021

Club IA Tesla

Posted by in categories: augmented reality, education

The future of education with augmented reality 🧑 🏫🧠


El futuro de la educación con Realidad Aumentada 🧑‍🏫 🧠.

Feb 28, 2021

‘Like a horror movie’: Caterpillar silences tomato’s cry for help, scientists find

Posted by in categories: chemistry, entertainment, food

“Scientists found that a caterpillar called the tomato fruit worm not only chomps on tomatoes and their leaves, but also deposits enzyme-laden saliva on the plant, interfering with its ability to cry for help. If it all sounds a bit improbable, starting with the concept of plants crying for help, scientists also scoffed at that idea when it was first proposed a few decades ago. But it has been shown time and time again that when under attack, plants can emit chemical distress signals, causing their peers to mount some sort of defense. A classic example is the smell of a freshly mown lawn, which prompts the release of protective compounds in nearby blades of grass that have yet to be cut. In some cases, plant distress signals can even summon help from other species. That’s what happens with the tomato. When caterpillars nibble on the plant’s leaves, the leaf pores release volatile chemicals that are detected by a type of parasite: a wasp that lays eggs inside caterpillars. (Not to overwork the horror-movie analogy, but as with the hapless astronauts in the “Aliens” franchise, it doesn’t end well for the caterpillar.)”


While there’s a famous horror-movie spoof about killer tomatoes, no one seems to have made one about caterpillars—the insect pests that eat the juicy red fruits of summer.

Feb 28, 2021

New study suggests supermassive black holes could form from dark matter

Posted by in category: cosmology

A new theoretical study has proposed a novel mechanism for the creation of supermassive black holes from dark matter. The international team find that rather than the conventional formation scenarios involving ‘normal’ matter, supermassive black holes could instead form directly from dark matter in high density regions in the centers of galaxies. The result has key implications for cosmology in the early Universe, and is published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Feb 28, 2021

After 20 years, physicists find a way to keep track of lost accelerator particles

Posted by in categories: particle physics, supercomputing

A high-intensity accelerator beam is formed of trillions of particles that race at lightning speeds down a system of powerful magnets and high-energy superconductors. Calculating the physics of the beam is so complex that not even the fastest supercomputers can keep up.