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johannessimon81

Astronomers Uncover a 'Transformer' Pulsar: switching between X-ray and Radio - 0 views

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    In a feat never before observed, a newly discovered pulsar shifts back and forth between emitting X-rays and radio waves. The discovery represents a long-sought "middle" phase in the life of these powerful objects.
jcunha

New frequency record breaking laser in the X-ray - 0 views

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    Good news for the imaging community: simpler and smaller x-ray sources are on the way.
Juxi Leitner

Nanoscale: Robot Arm Places Atoms and Molecules With 100% Accuracy | h+ Magazine - 0 views

  • built a two-armed nanorobotic device with the ability to place specific atoms and molecules where scientists want them. The device was approximately 150 x 50 x 8
LeopoldS

NASA - X-48B: Eighty Flights, Priceless Facts - 2 views

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    looks nice!
santecarloni

Phys. Rev. B 84, 075304 (2011): Visible-light absorption and large band-gap b... - 2 views

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    The return of hydrogen fuels??
Joris _

NigeriaSat-X Returns First Images | AVIATION WEEK - 0 views

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    Thumbs up for the effort and the outcome.
andreiaries

YouTube - Mission 3 computer animation - 0 views

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    ARCA is the romanian google X prize competitor.
  • ...1 more comment...
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    They'll probably launch the concept this month. It doesn't look very realistic, but I like the stage separation.
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    I like the 4 stage system. But how did they solve the plume issue ?
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    The plume issue is not that difficult. I think they used something similar on Apollo LES. The problem is stabilizing the entire system, which is extremely difficult. The entire system will most likely plummet down after the solar balloon phase (which is the only phase they tested before). At least they are not using government money :).
ESA ACT

Sophie RC16 - MacUpdate - 0 views

shared by ESA ACT on 24 Apr 09 - Cached
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    looks like a very interesting tool to me - should we try it on the X-Serve?
ESA ACT

Visual NetTools 1.0d - MacUpdate - 0 views

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    could this be useful for our x-serve?
ESA ACT

The OSx86 Scene Forums * Index page - 0 views

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    MAC OS X on a PC
ESA ACT

NodeBox | Home - 0 views

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    Excellent visualization tool for scientific data. Only for Mac Os X.
LeopoldS

Mac OS X Lion: This Is Not the Future We Were Hoping For - 4 views

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    interesting, critical article ....
jcunha

'Disruptive' science has declined - 2 views

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    About "Papers and patents are becoming less disruptive over time" https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05543-x. "Overall, our results deepen understanding of the evolution of knowledge and may guide career planning and science policy. To promote disruptive science and technology, scholars may be encouraged to read widely and given time to keep up with the rapidly expanding knowledge frontier. Universities may forgo the focus on quantity, and more strongly reward research quality56, and perhaps more fully subsidize year-long sabbaticals. Federal agencies may invest in the riskier and longer-term individual awards that support careers and not simply specific projects57, giving scholars the gift of time needed to step outside the fray, inoculate themselves from the publish or perish culture, and produce truly consequential work. Understanding the decline in disruptive science and technology more fully permits a much-needed rethinking of strategies for organizing the production of science and technology in the future."
LeopoldS

Ultra-efficient ionization of heavy atoms by intense X-ray free-electron laser pulses :... - 0 views

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    Extremely charged Xe ions by stripping off more electrons than previously thought possible ...
johannessimon81

Nuclear isomer - 2 views

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    We had a short discussion yesterday about using nuclear isomers as batteries for spacecraft. The principle is that energy is stored as an excitation of the nucleus which can then release the energy as a gamma-photon. However angular momentum has to be conserved an this suppresses the decay strongly - making these states stable up to 10^35 longer than a typical decay.
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    The key is the triggering of the dacay wheras the triggering comsumes less energy than the decay provides. The x-ray based triggering of the gamma photon decay turned out to be quite controversial and needs significantly more scientific attention.
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    I think that there should be some references and traces of the discussions we had on this on the shared drive or wiki ... One other aspect: converting the omnidirectional gamma bursts into useful energy ....
Joris _

Moonshots - Solve for X - 2 views

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    A forum to encourage and amplify technology-based moonshot thinking and collaboration.
fichbio

[1610.08323] Evidence for vacuum birefringence from the first optical polarimetry measu... - 3 views

shared by fichbio on 02 Dec 16 - No Cached
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    Abstract: The "Magnificent Seven" (M7) are a group of radio-quiet Isolated Neutron Stars (INSs) discovered in the soft X-rays through their purely thermal surface emission. Owing to the large inferred magnetic fields ($B\approx 10^{13}$ G), radiation from these sources is expected to be substantially polarised, independently on the mechanism actually responsible for the thermal emission.
Alexander Wittig

SS-520 No. 4 Launch Results | ISAS - 3 views

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    At 8:33 a.m., (Japan Standard Time) January 15, 2017, SS-520 No. 4, JAXA's sounding rocket launched from the Uchinoura Space Center. Through SS-520 No. 4 launch, JAXA sought for research and development of launch vehicles and satellites and the launch demonstration of TRICOM-1, its onboard nanosat that weighs about 3 kilograms. The launch was part of Japanese government's program for development of launch vehicles and satellites in public-private partnerships. Long story short: Space-X has the better fireworks
Ma Ru

The Wisdom of the Crowd in Combinatorial Problems - 5 views

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    A real scientific study...
Joris _

Flashback Trojan Hits 550,000 Macs - 1 views

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    Analysis of a recent Java flaw exploited by the Flashback Trojan reveals that more than 550,000 Macs were affected in the U.S. and abroad, according to anti-virus vendor Doctor Web. "This once again refutes claims by some experts that there are no cyber-threats to Mac OS X," Doctor Web said in a Tuesday blog post. lol :)
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