Science

Science Environment Space & Cosmos

These Tiny, Beautiful Wasps Eat the Hearts Out of Cockroaches

- Posted in Science by

Jewel wasps carve up cockroaches like jack-o’-lanterns in a way scientists have never seen before.

Source: These Tiny, Beautiful Wasps Eat the Hearts Out of Cockroaches

Carl Sagan’s audacious search for life on Earth has lessons for science today

- Posted in Science by

Editorial in Nature:

Early in 1993, a manuscript landed in the Nature offices announcing the results of an unusual — even audacious — experiment. The investigators, led by planetary scientist and broadcaster Carl Sagan, had searched for evidence of life on Earth that could be detected from space. The results, published 30 years ago this week, were “strongly suggestive” that the planet did indeed host life. “These observations constitute a control experiment for the search for extraterrestrial life by modern interplanetary spacecraft,” the team wrote.

The experiment was a master stroke. In 1989, NASA’s Galileo spacecraft had launched on a mission to orbit Jupiter, where it was scheduled to arrive in 1995. Sagan and his colleagues wondered whether Galileo would find definitive evidence of life back home if its instruments could be trained on Earth. They persuaded NASA to do just that as the craft flew past the home planet in 1990.

More here.

Source: Carl Sagan’s audacious search for life on Earth has lessons for science today

How One Line in the Oldest Math Text Hinted at Hidden Universes

- Posted in Science by

Source: How One Line in the Oldest Math Text Hinted at Hidden Universes

Atom Computing is the first to announce a 1,000+ qubit quantum computer

- Posted in Science by
A dark blue background filled with a regular grid of lighter dots

Enlarge / The qubits of the new hardware: an array of individual atoms. (credit: Atom Computing)

Today, a startup called Atom Computing announced that it has been doing internal testing of a 1,180 qubit quantum computer and will be making it available to customers next year. The system represents a major step forward for the company, which had only built one prior system based on neutral atom qubits—a system that operated using only 100 qubits.

The error rate for individual qubit operations is high enough that it won't be possible to run an algorithm that relies on the full qubit count without it failing due to an error. But it does back up the company's claims that its technology can scale rapidly and provides a testbed for work on quantum error correction. And, for smaller algorithms, the company says it'll simply run multiple instances in parallel to boost the chance of returning the right answer.

Computing with atoms

Atom Computing, as its name implies, has chosen neutral atoms as its qubit of choice (there are other companies that are working with ions). These systems rely on a set of lasers that create a series of locations that are energetically favorable for atoms. Left on their own, atoms will tend to fall into these locations and stay there until a stray gas atom bumps into them and knocks them out.

Read 19 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Source: Atom Computing is the first to announce a 1,000+ qubit quantum computer

Dr. Roland Pattillo, 89, Champion for the Provider of ‘Immortal’ Cells, Dies

- Posted in Science by

He wanted to put a face on the source of cells that led to striking medical advances, and through him a best seller and a movie did just that, telling the tale of Henrietta Lacks. Enter For Chance To Win Get Coupons And Free Samples Get A Chance To Win a $1500 Prepaid Card This Month. Take Our Online Survey Now! http://www.shoppersvoice.com/Coupons/Samples

Source: Dr. Roland Pattillo, 89, Champion for the Provider of ‘Immortal’ Cells, Dies

These Starfish Face Extinction. Scientists Are Helping Them Mate

- Posted in Science by

Scientists estimate that more than 5 billion sunflower sea stars, once a mighty predator, have died in the Pacific Ocean because of warming waters.

Source: These Starfish Face Extinction. Scientists Are Helping Them Mate

Space is starting to look like the better mining operation

- Posted in Science by
A truck carrier nickel minerals out of a mining site.

Enlarge / Metallic asteroids contain more than a thousand times as much nickel as the Earth's crust. (credit: Arne Hodalic/Getty)

Everyone’s into asteroids these days. Space agencies in Japan and the United States recently sent spacecraft to investigate, nudge, or bring back samples from these hurtling space rocks, and after a rocky start, the space mining industry is once again on the ascent. Companies like AstroForge, Trans Astronautica Corporation, and Karman+ are preparing to test their tech in space before venturing toward asteroids themselves.

It’s getting serious enough that economists published a series of papers on October 16 considering the growth of economic activity in space. For instance, a study by Ian Lange of the Colorado School of Mines considers the potential—and challenges—for a fledgling industry that might reach a significant scale in the next several decades, driven by the demand for critical metals used in electronics, solar and wind power, and electric car components, particularly batteries. While other companies are exploring the controversial idea of scooping cobalt, nickel, and platinum from the seafloor, some asteroids could harbor the same minerals in abundance—and have no wildlife that could be harmed during their extraction.

Lange’s study, coauthored with a researcher at the International Monetary Fund, models the growth of space mining relative to Earth mining, depending on trends in the clean energy transition, mineral prices, space launch prices, and how much capital investment and R&D grow. They find that in 30 to 40 years, the production of some metals from space could overtake their production on Earth. By their assessment, metallic asteroids contain more than a thousand times as much nickel as the Earth’s crust, in terms of grams per metric ton. Asteroids also have significant concentrations of cobalt, iron, platinum, and other metals. And thanks to reusable rockets developed by SpaceX, Rocket Lab, and other companies, since 2005 launch costs for payloads have plummeted by a factor of 20 or so per kilogram—and they could drop further.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Source: Space is starting to look like the better mining operation

Carbon capture pipeline nixed after widespread opposition

- Posted in Science by
protest sign

Enlarge / A sign against a proposed carbon dioxide pipeline outside a home in New Liberty, Iowa, on June 4, 2023. (credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images)

A company backed by BlackRock has abandoned plans to build a 1,300-mile pipeline across the US Midwest to collect and store carbon emissions from the corn ethanol industry following opposition from landowners and some environmental campaigners.

Navigator CO₂ on Friday said developing its carbon capture and storage (CCS) project called Heartland Greenway had been “challenging” because of the unpredictable nature of regulatory and government processes in South Dakota and Iowa.

Navigator’s decision to scrap its flagship $3.1 billion project—one of the biggest of its kind in the US—is a blow for a fledgling industry that is an important part of President Joe Biden’s climate strategy. CCS projects attempt to lock carbon underground for decades, preventing it from adding to heat-trapping gasses in the atmosphere.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Source: Carbon capture pipeline nixed after widespread opposition

Nawaz Sharif Returning to Pakistan and Hoping for a Political Comeback

- Posted in Science by

After nearly four years in exile, Mr. Sharif, a three-time prime minister, will hold a big gathering before an upcoming election. Canopy - GaoMon Source: Nawaz Sharif Returning to Pakistan and Hoping for a Political Comeback

Category

Tags