Science

Two weeks ago, on March 30th, the Atlantic magazine published a story headlined “Why People Are Acting so Weird.”  The article claimed that “Crime, “unruly passenger” incidents [on airplanes], and other types of strange behavior have all soared recently.” Peculiarly, the first example it gave was of Will Smith slapping Chris Rock at the Academy
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Vladimir Baranov is the Chief Information Officer and Chief Operating Officer at Scout. Scott Nelson is Scout’s Vice President of Product and Strategy. This spring, more than 1,000 top tech leaders and expert researchers sounded the alarm on artificial intelligence (AI) and called for regulation on the emerging technology’s “profound risks to society and humanity,”
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RaySearch Laboratories and its clinical customers are leveraging advances in machine learning to reimagine the radiotherapy workflow Data-driven oncology: a growing number of clinical customers are exploiting RayStation’s deep-learning capabilities for the automated segmentation of diverse disease indications. (Courtesy: RaySearch Laboratories) Machine-learning technologies are unleashing a wave of data-driven innovation and transformation in radiation oncology,
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Ken Peterman is chair, president, and CEO of Comtech, a global technology company providing terrestrial and wireless network solutions, next-generation 9-1-1 emergency services, satellite and space communications technologies, and cloud-native capabilities to commercial and government customers worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic brought to the forefront the importance of access to secure and ubiquitous connectivity for businesses,
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TAMPA, Fla. — EchoStar said its long-awaited Jupiter 3 satellite should be ready for a Falcon Heavy launch in August, although its deployment faces further delays if a higher priority government project takes this window. The 500 gigabit-per-second Americas-focused satellite, originally slated to launch in 2021 before production delays at Maxar Technologies, is needed to
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Antiferromagnetic: the new scheme for achieving exchange bias could lead to better spintronic devices. (Courtesy: Shutterstock/Inna-Bigun) A new method for creating and controlling exchange bias in an antiferromagnetic single-layer film has been developed by researchers in the US and Switzerland. The method involves low-energy ion implantation into the film, and it has the potential to
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GSSAP satellites collect space situational awareness data allowing for more accurate tracking and characterization of man-made orbiting objects. Credit: Northrop Grumman For some time now, alarms have been sounding in the United States military over activities of Chinese and Russian spacecraft in orbit that are viewed as potentially threatening. U.S. military leaders have called out
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The SunCHECK Quality Management Platform is helping medical physicists to optimize the radiotherapy workflow by automating the analysis of large-scale clinical data sets QA insights: Evy Bossuyt (left), a senior medical physicist at Iridium Netwerk, talks through SunCHECK Patient functionality with junior physicist Joachim Marichal. Alongside a core clinical team of 19 medical physicists and
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SAN FRANCISCO – Orbital Outpost X, a Silicon Valley space technology startup formerly called Space Villages, received a $5 million convertible note from Space Infrastructures Ventures of the Netherlands. With the loan, which will become an equity investment in the startup’s Series A round, OOX will continue to develop components, systems and subsystems for commercial
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Inspired by polar bears: this new textile creates an “on-body greenhouse” effect to keep you warm. (Courtesy: W Viola et al. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 10.1021/acsami.2c23075) A new double-layered fabric inspired by the black skin and white fur of polar bears uses heat radiated from the Sun and indoor lighting to trap and maintain warmth.
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WASHINGTON — A Rocket Lab Electron launched a pair of NASA cubesats designed to monitor the development of tropical storms, 11 months after the first satellites in the constellation were lost when a different rocket failed. The Electron lifted off from the company’s Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand at 9 p.m. Eastern May 7.
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