Monday 31 August 2015

NASA tests 3D-printed turbopump



NASA has previously tested simple 3D-printed rocket components, such as combustion chambers and fuel injectors, but if the technique is to be practical, it has to cope with more complex items. Case in point is this 3D-printed rocket engine turbopump. Successfully built and tested at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, the turbopump is described as "one of the most complex, 3D-printed rocket engine parts ever made."

.. Continue Reading NASA tests 3D-printed turbopump

Section: 3D Printing

Tags:
Rocket
3D Printers
NASA

Related Articles:
NASA using 3D laser printing to create complex rocket parts
NASA 3D-prints and fires rocket engine component
NASA scales up 3D-printed rocket component testing
3D-printed rocket parts stand up to the heat in NASA hot-fire tests
UCSD students test fire 3D-printed metal rocket engine
Marshall Space Flight Center: A tour through NASA's hidden gem

Gremlins in the works: DARPA's vision for future air operations



The United States boasts some of the most advanced multi-mission combat aircraft in the world, but this can be a liability as well as an asset. True, each aircraft can outperform an entire squadron of a few decades ago, but they're also very expensive, incredibly complex, and not exactly expendable. For these reasons DARPA has launched the Gremlins program, which aims to develop swarms of cheaper, smarter aircraft that can be deployed and collected in midair.

.. Continue Reading Gremlins in the works: DARPA's vision for future air operations

Section: Aircraft

Tags:
UAV
DARPA
Robotics

Related Articles:
DARPA's new robotics program aims to harness the power of individuals and small businesses
South Korea's Team KAIST wins 2015 DARPA Robotics Challenge
Advanced robotics technology showcased at DRC
25 teams prepare for 2015 DARPA Robotics Challenge Finals
Robots square off at the 2015 DRC Finals
Backstage with the world's most advanced robots

Danish astronaut to control earthbound rover from ISS



Working outside in space is a tall order. The environment is hostile, even the smallest job takes hours instead of minutes, and everything has to be done in either bulky suits or through robotic arms. It's a challenge that will become even more difficult when future astronauts are controlling robotic rovers from orbit, so ESA is getting in a bit of practice. Next month Danish astronaut Andreas Mogensen will take control of a rover in the Netherlands while orbiting the Earth aboard the International Space Station.

.. Continue Reading Danish astronaut to control earthbound rover from ISS

Section: Space

Tags:
Robotics
International Space Station
ESA
NASA

Related Articles:
First ISS to Earth "handshake" demonstrates space-to-ground remote control
SpaceX CRS-7 mission destroyed after liftoff
Astronauts chow down on space harvest for the first time
Cargo spacecraft loss delays astronaut return
ESA expands virtual tour of the International Space Station
First zero-gravity 3D printer heads to International Space Station

Saturday 29 August 2015

The microbot designed to push all your buttons




The mechanical button or switch is that most simple of user interfaces. So simple that just about every electrical device in the home, from lights to coffee machines, will have one. With the goal of letting these legacy devices join the home automation bandwagon, South Korean startup Naran has come up with Microbot Push – a wireless robotic "finger" designed to operate standard buttons and switches.


.. Continue Reading The microbot designed to push all your buttons




Section: Electronics




Tags:
Automation
Internet of Things
Robotics
Naran

Related Articles:
Rethink Robotics announces more dextrous Sawyer one-armed robot
Review: Turning heads with the Roadie automatic guitar tuner
High-end sustainable W.I.N.D. House can be controlled by smartphone
hub by Premier Inn hotel will allow guests control their room with a smartphone
Nest adds integration with Automatic connected car adapter
Branto lets you keep a 360-degree eye on your home



TWEET

VISIT WEBSITE

Thursday 27 August 2015

Buy a stake in the TriFan 600 VTOL business plane



Crowdfunding is usually associated with consumer goods like smartwatches and drones, but XTI Aircraft Company of Denver, Colorado is hoping to score a double first with its TriFan 600. Pitched as the first commercially certified high-speed, long-range Vertical Takeoff and Landing (VTOL) airplane that combines the vertical lift capability of a helicopter with the speed of an airplane, it's also the first major aviation project to launch an equity crowdfunding campaign in the wake of new rules approved by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

.. Continue Reading Buy a stake in the TriFan 600 VTOL business plane

Section: Aircraft

Tags:
VTOL
Crowdfunding
Aircraft

Related Articles:
Way is a connected device that provides personalized skincare advice
Artiphon's redesigned Instrument 1 is more compact and versatile than before
Tabletop electroplater could let you become a real-life King Midas
Volvorii Timeless shoes use E Ink to stay in fashion
Silent Power PC ditches the fan for a "cool" copper afro
Volocopter flies past crowdfunding goal

Wednesday 26 August 2015

Smooth-moving robots cut energy consumption



With their precise mechanical movements, robots seem like the most efficient of workers, but they can actually waste a good deal of energy. Chalmers University of Technology is developing a new optimization tool that acts like an efficiency expert for industrial robots by smoothing their movements to reduce their energy consumption by as much as 40 percent.

.. Continue Reading Smooth-moving robots cut energy consumption

Section: Robotics

Tags:
Efficiency
Chalmers University of Technology
Robots
Robotics

Related Articles:
Mind-controlled mechatronic prosthetics now a reality
3D-printed objects created entirely from wood cellulose
AstaZero road safety testing facility opens in Sweden
Using GPS to measure changes in sea level
Mind-controlled permanently-attached prosthetic arm could revolutionize prosthetics
Optical amplifier could quadruple the range of fiber optic signals

Lockheed Martin's satellite cooler gets triple the power



Space is cold, but not cold enough for satellite sensors that need to be kept at cryogenic temperatures. Lockheed Martin’s lightweight High Power Microcryocooler is designed to keep these vital components cold, and it now packs three times the power density of previous systems.

.. Continue Reading Lockheed Martin's satellite cooler gets triple the power

Section: Space

Tags:
Cryogenics
Lockheed Martin
Satellite

Related Articles:
US Navy to test Fortis exoskeletons
Lockheed Martin developing successor to the SR-71 Blackbird
Robotic vehicles team up on first fully autonomous mission demonstration
Lockheed Martin laser weapon takes out truck
Lockheed tests Orion fairing design changes
Lockheed Martin unveils latest version of F-16 Fighting Falcon

New record set for high-temperature superconductivity



With their zero electrical resistance and remarkable magnetic and thermal conductive properties, superconductors have the potential to revolutionize numerous technologies. The trouble is, they work best at cryogenic temperatures in the neighborhood of absolute zero (-273° C, -460° F). As part of the quest to come up with a room temperature superconductor, researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz have developed a new record-high-temperature superconductor – and it smells like rotten eggs... Continue Reading New record set for high-temperature superconductivity

Section: Science

Tags:
Cryogenics
superconductor
Physics
Max Planck Institute
Temperature
Johannes Gutenberg University MainzRelated Articles:
Researchers discover a universal law of superconductivity
ARC reactor design uses superconducting magnets to draw fusion power closer
Scientists use light to alter properties of high temperature superconductors
Aluminum "superatoms" hint at a new type of superconducting materials
Sapphire fibers carry 40 times more electricity than copper wire
Nano-patterned superconducting thin films could lead to new electronic devices

TWEET

Tuesday 25 August 2015

MultiFab mixes and matches up to 10 different materials in a single 3D print job



3D printers may have come on in leaps and bounds in recent years, but most are one trick ponies in that their computer-controlled syringes extrude only one material at a time to build up an object. It's a process that's slow, imprecise, and often requires items to be printed in separate pieces and then assembled. MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab's (CSAIL) MutliFab printer takes 3D printing technology a step further by combining 3D optical scanning with the ability to print using 10 different materials on the same job.

.. Continue Reading MultiFab mixes and matches up to 10 different materials in a single 3D print job

Section: 3D Printing

Tags:
3-D+Printing
MIT
3D Printers

Related Articles:
Form 1+ 3D printer is twice as fast as the original
New Matter aims to make 3D printing more accessible with the MOD-t
Mataerial 3D printer builds gravity-defying structures directly onto walls
3D printing breakthrough creates tiny metal structures
Pirate3D reveals Buccaneer massmarket 3D printer
BigRep ONE 3D printer creates whole pieces of furniture

New record set for high-temperature superconductivity



With their zero electrical resistance and remarkable magnetic and thermal conductive properties, superconductors have the potential to revolutionize numerous technologies. The trouble is, they work best at cryogenic temperatures in the neighborhood of absolute zero (-273° C, -460° F). As part of the quest to come up with a room temperature superconductor, researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry and the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz have developed a new record-high-temperature superconductor – and it smells like rotten eggs.

.. Continue Reading New record set for high-temperature superconductivity

Section: Science

Tags:
Cryogenics
superconductor
Physics
Max Planck Institute
Temperature
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz

Related Articles:
Researchers discover a universal law of superconductivity
ARC reactor design uses superconducting magnets to draw fusion power closer
Scientists use light to alter properties of high temperature superconductors
Aluminum "superatoms" hint at a new type of superconducting materials
Sapphire fibers carry 40 times more electricity than copper wire
Nano-patterned superconducting thin films could lead to new electronic devices

Sunday 23 August 2015

Tomatoes taste better after a nice hot bath



Store bought tomatoes are notorious for having an insipid taste, so a team of scientists led by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) is working on new methods to ensure that future supermarket tomatoes have more flavor. The research suggests this can be achieved by a simple, inexpensive alteration to conventional processing – a hot bath.

.. Continue Reading Tomatoes taste better after a nice hot bath

Section: Science

Tags:
Agriculture
Food technology
Food

Related Articles:
Edible coating more than doubles strawberry shelf life
Computer system identifies cows by their muzzle prints
New Holland launches the world's most powerful combine harvester
Ethiopia’s Agriculture ministry rolls out specialized phone service for farmers
Plantui Plantation gives the smart garden room to grow
Lely Astronaut A4 milking robot lets cows milk themselves

We may not be running out of helium after all



Helium is the second most abundant element in the Universe, but it's relatively rare on Earth – so much so that some have called for a ban on party balloons to ward off a worldwide shortage. However, a team of scientists led by Diveena Danabalan of Durham University conducted a new study that indicates that there may be vast new sources of the gas in the western mountain regions of North America.

.. Continue Reading We may not be running out of helium after all

Section: Science

Tags:
Durham University
Helium
Geology

Related Articles:
Hidden archeology of Stonehenge revealed in new geophysical map
Atomic clocks could be used to monitor volcanoes and predict eruptions
Image release allows viewers to tour the Imhotep region of 67P
Curiosity dates rock, finds potential good news for astronauts and search for life
ESA spacecraft detects the presence of enormous Martian supervolcano
Strange red "arcs" discovered on Saturnian moon Tethys

Saturday 22 August 2015

Catch up



One truism of nuclear reactors is that you really don't want to be next to one. Unfortunately, reactor cores need to be inspected and maintained, which means teams of workers going inside the containment vessel. It's an operation that's not only hazardous, but expensive and time consuming. In an effort to make such inspections safer, cheaper, and faster, GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy has developed the Stinger; a free-swimming, remote-controlled robot that replaces humans for cleaning and inspecting reactor vessels.

.. Continue Reading GE atomic swimmer robot keeps tabs on nuclear reactors

Section: Robotics

Tags:
Robot
General Electric
Hitachi
Robotics
Nuclear

Related Articles:
Hitachi unveils clean-up robot destined for Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant
Lasers point to the future of uranium enrichment
Hitachi developing reactor that burns nuclear waste
Mitsubishi adapts EV batteries for Super Giraffe robot
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries reveals nuclear plant inspection robot MHI-MEISTeR
Toshiba unveils four-legged nuclear plant inspection robot




If there's one area where the 21st century has gone backwards technologically, it's in supersonic passenger flight. With the grounding of the Concorde fleets in 2003, flying faster than the speed of sound reverted to a military monopoly, but that hasn't kept engineers from trying for a revival. Now Airbus' Marco Prampolini and Yohann Coraboeuf have been granted a US patent for an "ultra-rapid air vehicle" designed to fly at 20 km (12.4 mi) higher than conventional aircraft and over four times the speed of sound – twice the speed of Concorde... Continue Reading Airbus patents design for Mach 4-plus supersonic jet

Section: Aircraft

Tags:
Airbus
Patent
Supersonic
AircraftRelated Articles:
Spike S-512 Supersonic Jet will have screens instead of windows
NASA's "flying saucer" completes second test
Third test flight of X-51A hypersonic missile ends in failure
Is Russia working on a crazy supersonic cargo plane?
Spike S-512 could be the world's first supersonic business jet
Ultra-efficient 4,000 mph vacuum-tube trains – why aren't they being built?




Recently, NASA has been looking at CubeSats as a way of carrying out economical deep space missions. One of the first of these may be shoebox-sized satellite called the Lunar IceCube, which is designed to look for water ice and other resources on the Moon. Tentatively aimed to launch on the first Orion mission scheduled to fly by 2018, it is intended to not only uncover materials for future deep-space missions and lunar colonization, but also as a technology demonstrator for a new class of interplanetary probes... Continue Reading Diminutive Lunar IceCube satellite to scan Moon for water and other resources

Section: Space

Tags:
Moon
Busek Company
CubeSat
NASA
Morehead State UniversityRelated Articles:
Startup helps you build your very own picosatellite on a budget
NASA plans first interplanetary CubeSats
How do you put a big antenna on a tiny satellite? Make it inflatable
Tiny satellites will use Kinect to dock with one another
NASA's Space Launch System to deploy 11 additional satellites on maiden launch
LightSail successfully deploys solar sail




The Curiosity rover has now been on Mars for three years, and to mark the occasion, NASA has released two new tools designed to both educate the public and help scientists select future landing sites. The tools allow visitors to learn more about Curiosity and its mission and explore the Martian surface by climbing aboard Curiosity for a virtual tour... Continue Reading NASA marks Curiosity's third anniversary with new interactive online tools

Section: Space

Tags:
Anniversary
Mars
Curiosity Rover
NASARelated Articles:
McLaren celebrates 50th anniversary with limited edition 12C
Blue Train Race 75th anniversary model
B&O 80th Anniversary Limited Edition BeoCom 2 cordless telephone
Mars Opportunity rover celebrates 11 years on the Red Planet with impressive panorama
Curiosity marks two years on Mars
Spectacular Landsat 8 flyover stretches from Sweden to British Columbia




The world's growing population faces a constant string of tradeoffs. On the one hand, we need more rice to feed ourselves. On the other hand, control of greenhouse gases is a major priority and rice growing generates a lot of methane. It seems like a Catch 22, but a team led by the US Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) has come up with a genetically engineered strain of rice that not only produces almost no methane, but also more grains... Continue Reading Addition of a single gene makes rice more environmentally friendly

Section: Environment

Tags:
Agriculture
Greenhouse emissions
Genetic engineeringRelated Articles:
Plantui Plantation gives the smart garden room to grow
Earth's oceans found to be a much greater source of greenhouse gas than previously believed
Supermarket with rooftop greenhouse to sell über-local produce
Roots Up greenhouse collects mountain dew to water crops in Ethiopian highlands
A warm little bubble for your back garden
NASA takes climate change study to the air




The International Space Station (ISS) was the scene of an historic lunch this week with the crew members of Expedition 44 dining on the first meal harvested in space. The dish, which consisted on leaves of "Outredgeous" red romaine lettuce grown in NASA's "Veggie" zero-gravity greenhouse, is part of the space agency's effort to find ways to feed tomorrow's deep-space travelers... Continue Reading Astronauts chow down on space harvest for the first time

Section: Space

Tags:
NASA
Food
Food technology
Hydroponics
Crops
International Space StationRelated Articles:
Supermarket with rooftop greenhouse to sell über-local produce
The Green Wheel would grow herbs and veggies, Halo-style
Urban Cultivator automatically grows greens indoors
ECO-Cycle kit grows greens and cleans aquarium water
Solving the global food crisis: vertical aeroponic farm grows food out of thin air
Agri-Cube grows mass quantities of vegetables in a one-car parking spot




One of the great tragedies of the Second World War has been remembered with Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Paul G Allen recovering the bell from the British battlecruiser HMS Hood, which was sunk in battle 74 years ago by Hitler’s flagship Bismarck. The brass ship's bell was recovered from a mile and a half (2.4 km) down in the Denmark Straits by a remote operated submersible (ROV) controlled from Allen's private yacht M/Y Octopus... Continue Reading Paul Allen recovers bell from HMS Hood

Section: Marine

Tags:
Royal Navy
HistoryRelated Articles:
Royal Navy deployed laser weapons during the Falklands War
RAF recreates historic D-Day recon photo
Ancient Egyptian faience may be key to printing 3D ceramics
Historical scientific treats up for auction at Bonhams
Altair 8800 Clone: A near-empty box filled with history
Happy Birthday: The Web turns 25




The "entry level" Rolls Royce Ghost Series II aimed at the younger, entrepreneurial market has been turning some heads lately, but Germany-based car customizer Spofec is trying to turn them a bit farther. The Spofec Black One takes the Ghost and adds bespoke modification packages featuring a matte black motif and improved engine performance kits to create a car that wouldn't look out of place in the Green Hornet's garage... Continue Reading Spofec Black One adds bling and horses to Rolls-Royce Ghost Series II

Section: Automotive

Tags:
Spofec
Rolls Royce
Rolls Royce GhostRelated Articles:
Up close with the extraordinary Rolls-Royce Ghost Series II
Rolls-Royce cranks up the volume with music-inspired Wraith
Rolls-Royce helps schoolchildren design a mini e-racer
Rolls-Royce releases its Suhail Collection to mark "Year of the Bespoke Car"
SPOFEC tweaks the Rolls Royce Wraith
Rolls-Royce reprises the Ghost name




In space travel, the first step is always the most expensive, but why blast-off in a rocket if you can catch a ride on a space elevator? Canadian space firm Thoth Technology has received a US patent for an elevator to take spacecraft and astronauts at least part way into space. If it's ever built, the 20 km (12.4 mi) high Thothx inflatable space tower holds the promise of reducing launch costs by 30 percent in terms of fuel, and may even replace some classes of satellites... Continue Reading Canadian firm patents inflatable space elevator

Section: Space

Tags:
Canada
Spacecraft
Space ElevatorsRelated Articles:
Japanese company plans to have space elevator "up" and running by 2050
Building a space elevator starts with a lunar elevator by 2020
Space Elevator project seeking public interest
Elevator: 2010 - a space race for the whole family
LiftPort plans to build space elevator on the Moon by 2020
"Going up" at 45 mph: Hitachi to deliver world's fastest elevator




On Thursday at 02:03 GMT, Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and the European Space Agency's (ESA) Rosetta orbiter reached their closest point (known as perihelion) to the Sun, coming within 186 million km (115 million mi) of our parent star. The event was marked by an increase in activity on the comet, which is expected to continue over the next few weeks as it now heads toward the outer Solar System... Continue Reading Comet 67P and Rosetta make their closest pass of the Sun

Section: Space

Tags:
Comets
Rosetta
ESARelated Articles:
Rosetta reveals comet secrets
Rosetta mission extended by nine months
Rosetta discovers active sinkholes on 67P
ESA releases images of Rosetta's comet close encounter
Huge release of Rosetta images paints a spooky picture of comet's rugged landscape
Comet dust sends Rosetta into safe mode




In today's world, vacuum tubes or radio valves seem as dead as high button shoes and buggy whips, but DARPA sees them as very much the technology of the future. As part of a new program, the agency is looking to develop new tube designs and manufacturing techniques for use in tomorrow's high-powered communications and radar systems... Continue Reading DARPA sees future in vacuum tubes

Section: Military

Tags:
DARPA
ElectronicRelated Articles:
New molecular transistor can control single electrons
The best of CES 2015
DARPA circuit smashes electronic speed record
Creating materials to enable "transient electronics" that dissolve on command
Things heat up for self-destructing electronic devices
Review: Cubit programmable "make anything" electronic platform




Fusion power can seem a bit like the last bus at night; it's always coming, but never arrives. MIT is working to change that with a new compact tokamak fusion reactor design based on the latest magnetic superconductor technology. The ARC (affordable, robust, compact) reactor design promises smaller, cheaper reactors that could make fusion power practical within 10 years... Continue Reading ARC reactor design uses superconducting magnets to draw fusion power closer

Section: Science

Tags:
Magnetic
Electricity
superconductor
Power
Nuclear
Fusion
MITRelated Articles:
Researchers discover a universal law of superconductivity
Superconducting coil to slash costs and improve efficiency of direct-drive wind turbines
EADS VoltAir all-electric aircraft concept unveiled in Paris
New record brings superconductors closer to the mainstream
Practical magnetic levitating transmission gear system loses its teeth
Nano-patterned superconducting thin films could lead to new electronic devices




If you offer someone "a penny for their thoughts," how good a deal might you be getting? A study conducted at the University of Leicester has sought to shed some light on the value of our brainpower, finding a single penny to be worth to precisely three hours, seven minutes and 30 seconds worth of thinking... Continue Reading Putting a price tag on brainpower

Section: Science

Tags:
Neuroscience
Brain
University of LeicesterRelated Articles:
Thync review: Where we just say yes to a drug-like, brain-zapping wearable
Thync mood-changing wearable officially launches – we go hands-on (again)
Imaging tool lets scientists look inside brain at nanoscale resolution
Sensor to detect Earth’s magnetic field discovered in an animal for very first time
New optical fiber material could pave the way for computers that "think"
Neuromarketing: What's it all about?



A head trauma can be difficult to diagnose and destroy a life years after the event. Being able to tell immediately if the force someone has suffered is sufficient to result in a traumatic brain injury can make all the difference in limiting the damage. A team from the University of Pennsylvania has developed a material that could one day be incorporated into headgear to instantly gauge the severity of blows and provide a clearly visible indication of injury... Continue Reading Color-changing polymer to indicate severity of hits to the head

Section: Science

Tags:
University of Pennsylvania
Trauma
Brain
Concussions
HelmetsRelated Articles:
Experimental optical fibers utilize built-in electronics instead of separate chips
RHex robot shows off Parkour moves
Quadrotors perform James Bond theme
Super-absorbent polymer may be used on oil spills
Clawed micro-drone swoops up prey mid-flight
2013 James Dyson Award winners announced




Strawberries may be delicious, but they don't have much of a shelf life. So if you find a great bargain on a flat of them, you can end up throwing half of it away after a few days. In a move that may save many a shortcake, scientists at the University San Nicolás de los Garza in Mexico have developed an edible coating made from pectin that preserves strawberries for longer without affecting their taste... Continue Reading Edible coating more than doubles strawberry shelf life

Section: Science

Tags:
Agriculture
Food technologyRelated Articles:
AeroFarms to open "world’s largest indoor vertical farm"
Ethiopia’s Agriculture ministry rolls out specialized phone service for farmers
Plantui Plantation gives the smart garden room to grow
Lely Astronaut A4 milking robot lets cows milk themselves
AgriRover brings Mars rover technology to the farm
Antibiotic-free method to protect animals from common infections




Buying tickets into space has typically been the reserve of governments and billionaires, but if you want to send your name on an interplanetary jaunt NASA might now be able to accommodate you. The space agency is now accepting submissions from members of the public who'd like their names recorded on a silicon microchip and shuttled to the Red Planet onboard the InSight Mars lander launching next year... Continue Reading NASA issues boarding call to take your name to Mars

Section: Space

Tags:
InSight
Mars
NASARelated Articles:
Construction of InSight Mars lander to begin
NASA plans first interplanetary CubeSats
Mars orbiter prepares for next year's InSight lander arrival
Lockheed Martin begins Insight Mars lander final assembly
NASA reveals instruments selected for Mars 2020 rover
NASA tests flying saucer designed to land heavier payloads on Mars




By mimicking naturally-occurring nanostructures found in things like water striders, spiders and lotus leaves, scientists have created hydrophobic surfaces that could prove invaluable for everything from pipes to boats and submarines. Now researchers at Northwestern University have deduced the optimal texture roughness required to achieve this property and keep surfaces dry underwater for months at a time... Continue Reading Hydrophobic nanostructures stay dry for months underwater

Section: Science

Tags:
Hydrophobic
Surfaces
Nanostructures
Northwestern UniversityRelated Articles:
Fractal nanostructures used to build new supermaterials
Scientists spin up graphene in a kitchen blender
Large 3D nanostructures built from Lego-like DNA bricks
Liquid and ice "SLIPS" off new ultra smooth surface
Lasers help create water-repelling, light-absorbing, self-cleaning metals
Nanoscale lithography breakthrough uses Scotch tape




Researchers at Ohio State University (OSU) have grown a nearly complete human brain equivalent in size and structure to that of a five-week old fetus. Called a "brain organoid," it was bioengineered using adult human skin cells and is the most advanced human brain model yet created in a laboratory... Continue Reading Brain model with maturity of 5-week-old fetus grown in a lab

Section: Science

Tags:
Neuroscience
Biotechnology
Ohio State UniversityRelated Articles:
Scientists come a step closer to "regrowing" limbs
Artificial human blood substitute could help meet donor blood shortfall
Researchers turn gray matter transparent to shed light on the brain’s secrets
New therapy to help addicts put memories of meth use behind them
Test tube milk the latest to hit the engineered food scene
These flowers change color when you feed them beer




Responding to recent rumors that an asteroid will crash near the island of Puerto Rico between September 15 and 28, NASA has issued a statement categorically stating that this will not happen... Continue Reading NASA debunks asteroid strike rumors

Section: Space

Tags:
Asteroid
NASARelated Articles:
Once-in-a-generation near miss for Asteroid with its own moon
World Asteroid Day raises awareness of a deadly menace
NASA outlines Asteroid Redirect Mission
Dawn probe data indicates ancient flowing water on Vesta
NASA releases asteroid hunting software to the general public
NASA application grants general public the opportunity to explore the surface of Vesta




What is small enough to fit in an airliner carry-on bin and has the potential to save thousands of lives and millions of dollars worth of property? The answer is the Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS) – NASA’s next-generation hurricane-observing microsatellites, which are now being assembled at the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in San Antonio, Texas... Continue Reading Construction of next-gen hurricane-hunting satellites begins

Section: Space

Tags:
NASA
Weather
SatelliteRelated Articles:
Pyxis system would use GPS signals to gather more accurate weather forecasts
Spire plans to use tiny satellites for more accurate weather forecasts
NASA's GPM satellite tested and ready to go
Ionospheric Connection Explorer mission gets green light for development
NASA's SMAP mission begins science operations
ESA's Aeolus mission will be ready to study the Earth's winds by 2016