Science

Winning big: Cerca Magnetics wearable magnetoencephalography scanner. (Courtesy: Cerca Magnetics) Earlier this week I had the pleasure of attending the first day of the Economist’s Commercialising Quantum Global conference in London. It was a thoroughly enjoyable experience to be out and about again, rubbing shoulders with people interested in all things quantum. The conference was
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TAMPA, Fla. — Climate data startup Amini has raised $2 million for a satellite constellation to gather more Africa-focused environmental information. European climate technology fund Pale Blue Dot led the pre-seed funding round, Amini announced May 18, supporting a six-month-old venture currently using public satellite data to provide intelligence for smallholder farmers on the continent.
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Mechanical nanosurgery: artistic rendering of a new approach, developed by SickKids and University of Toronto researchers, that targets cancer cells from inside the tumour, sparing healthy tissue in the process. (Courtesy: Created by The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) research team using Midjourney) A new nanosurgery technique could help treat glioblastoma, one of the most
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WASHINGTON — For the third consecutive year, bipartisan legislation will be moving through the House and Senate aiming to establish a Space National Guard as a reserve component of the U.S. Space Force.  The legislative push, led by lawmakers from Colorado, California and Florida, has encountered stern opposition from the White House Office of Management
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White stripes: The brilliant white colouring seen on the Pacific cleaner shrimp. (Courtesy: PilarMeca, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18884803) Researchers in Israel have uncovered the unique optical nanostructure that gives an ocean-going scavenger its brilliant white colouring. Using a range of imaging techniques, a team led by Benjamin Palmer at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel,
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Douglas Ligor is a senior behavioral/social scientist at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation, and a member of RAND’s space enterprise initiative. Josh Becker is an adjunct policy researcher at RAND. If you pay a company like SpaceX, Blue Origin, Virgin Galactic, or Boeing to go into space, perhaps even perform your own spacewalk, should those
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Adam Routh is a Ph.D. candidate at King’s College London preparing to defend his research exploring international governance of emerging space activities. The space ecosystem has been undergoing considerable change in recent decades except for one crucial area — the international governance of space. The space industry is growing rapidly, as are space domain challenges
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Quantum collaboration: Elham Kashefi (left), director of the new Quantum Software Lab and chief scientist of the National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC), listens to a talk at the lab’s launch event with Michael Cuthbert, the NQCC’s director. Also in the picture are (foreground) Sir Peter Knight of Imperial College London and (background) Iain Gordon, head
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Time-varying metamaterial: illustration of how a 2D photonic time crystal can amplify light waves. (Courtesy: Xuchen Wang/Aalto University) A major barrier to creating photonic time crystals in the lab has been overcome by a team of researchers in Finland, Germany and the US. Sergei Tretyakov at Aalto University and colleagues have shown how the time
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