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The inflatable test facility, known as a Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, or BEAM, will launch aboard a SpaceX cargo resupply mission to the ISS in 2015. After its arrival, astronauts will install the module on the aft port of the station’s Tranquility node, and then activate a pressurization system to expand the structure to its full size.
The BEAM will remain attached to the ISS for two years, during which station crew members and ground-based engineers will test the module’s structural integrity and leak rate, and track environmental details like radiation and temperature changes. Once the test period is over, the BEAM will be jettisoned from the station and will burn up as it re-enter’s Earth’s atmosphere.
A flexible paper computer developed at Queen’s University in collaboration with Plastic Logic and Intel Labs could one day revolutionize the way people work with tablets and computers.
The PaperTab tablet looks and feels just like a sheet of paper. However, it is fully interactive with a flexible, high-resolution 10.7” plastic display developed by Plastic Logic, a flexible touchscreen, and powered by the second generation Intel Core i5 Processor.
PAPER COMPUTER
More at A paper-thin flexible tablet computer | KurzweilAI
I wonder if it overheats and if it does will it melt the plastic.
PAPER COMPUTER
More at A paper-thin flexible tablet computer | KurzweilAI
I wonder if it overheats and if it does will it melt the plastic.
its cool that it picks the info from another by just touching and its as thin as a plastic sheet, but it seems gay that there are wires and so many tabs for different use, so the one tab is not like computer, its a very basic machine incapable of multitask
and whats with the cold zone and warm zone?
i can safely speculate ,tht the processing unit wont be with the paper like input/output device. if a very small form factor Cpu+Gpu are coupled with the screen then it would probably be a small bulk of solid mass at the edge.
In the first seconds of the video they are rotating it, on the right side it looks to be bulkier then on the left.
Freeze it on 0:02 and 0:05
Graphene and Human Brain Project win largest research excellence award in history, as battle for sustained science funding continues
The winning Graphene and Human Brain initiatives are set to receive one billion euros each, to deliver 10 years of world-beating science at the crossroads of science and technology.
"Graphene" will investigate and exploit the unique properties of a revolutionary carbon-based material. Graphene is an extraordinary combination of physical and chemical properties: it is the thinnest material, it conducts electricity much better than copper, it is 100-300 times stronger than steel and it has unique optical properties. The use of graphene was made possible by European scientists in 2004, and the substance is set to become the wonder material of the 21st century, as plastics were to the 20th century, including by replacing silicon in ICT products.
The skin of red grapes contains resveratrol, which appears to have an anti-ageing effect, and if delivered in concentrated form could help us live longer. Photo: ALAMY
Drugs that can slow the ageing process are likely to be available this decade, raising the prospect of people living to 150 or longer.
'Wonder' pills that help the body repair itself are in the early stages of development and will help us live well into our second century - while stem cell therapies will boost our quality of life.
Harvard geneticist Professor David Sinclair told the Dean's lecture: 'We are seeing the beginning of technology that could one day allow us to reach 150.'
Prof Sinclair is researching resveratrol - an anti-ageing compound in red wine.
A new compound is being trialled which is 1000 times more powerful than resveratrol - and is showing signs of being effective.
He said: 'Our bodies have an extraordinary ability to repair themselves and resveratrol is seemingly able to tap into those healing mechanisms.'
He said that plant-derived compounds like resveratrol had activated enzymes in mice that trigger the DNA repair process.
'Those enzymes exist in human bodies too, so the possibility of drugs that slow the ageing process is very likely within our lifetime,' he said.
The mantis shrimp is one of the most incredible creatures found in our oceans. Over millions of years, it has equipped itself with an arsenal to rival that of any other organism, besting the limits of human technology on more than one front.
Firstly, it packs the biggest punch of any predator, with a sophisticated muscle mechanism allowing speeds in excess of 50mph to be attained. Couple this with the ability to create extreme low pressure behind it's extended arm, causing the water to spontaneously boil, no prey stands a chance. This action releases intense energy, enough to break sheets of glass. For a very interesting TED talk on exactly this, visit: Sheila Patek clocks the fastest animals | Video on TED.com
That is not all. The mantis shrimp has the most sophisticated and extensive eyes of any known creature. With their unique shape and composition, the shrimp can see in most directions simultaneously, as well as observing more of the spectrum than us humans, both at the infra-red and ultra-violet ends. This excellent asset, coupled with the killer punch, makes the mantis shrimp one of the most effective predators in the world, as well as being one of the most beautiful. The in-depth explanation for this exquisite sight can be found here:
http://scubageek.com/articles/mantis_eye.pdf
Swiss Space Systems (S-3), based in Payerne in the Alpine country, has released plans for a reusable small satellite launch system, with test flights scheduled to begin in 2017.
S-3's plan entails air-launching a reusable lifting body-like vehicle from the top of an Airbus A300, which will, in turn, release a disposable third stage. Though crucial details were not immediately available, the launch system is closely based on Dassault's airborne reusable hypersonic vehicle (VEHRA) concept, which the company has been proposing for several years without any takers. Dassault is one of six industrial partners in the project.
S-3's launcher will deliver up to 250kg (550lb) into low Earth orbit. The company intends to build and flight test a mockup of the second stage in 2014, with a flight-ready spacecraft assembled by 2016, ahead of a 2017 spaceflight.
A deal with Spaceport Malaysia was signed on the same day as the launch vehicle's public unveiling.
The company is associated with a number of notable people within the space sector, including Switzerland's first astronaut, Claude Nicollier.
S-3 was unavailable for immediate comment.
(Phys.org)—Researchers at the Keck Institute for Space Studies have released a paper outlining a proposal to send an unmanned spacecraft into deep space to capture an asteroid and return it as a Near Earth Asteroid (NEA) orbiting the moon. In putting together the paper, the team at Keck worked with several NASA agencies, universities and private groups with the aim of discerning the feasibility of such a project and then outlining how it might come about.
NASA is planning for a robotic spaceship to lasso a small asteroid and park it near the moon for astronauts to explore, a top U.S. senator disclosed Friday.