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ESA ACT

Space-Based Solar Power - Pentagon Fights Global Warming with Satellites - Popular Mech... - 0 views

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    another one on SPS
ESA ACT

Hydraulic Linear Actuators reference item relating to Scuola Superiore Sant Anna, - 0 views

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    Some news on our roots project. Are we mentioned? No.
ESA ACT

PLoS ONE: The Fastest Flights in Nature: High-Speed Spore Discharge Mechanisms among Fungi - 0 views

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    Tobias have a look at this! 180 000 g acceleration!! LS
ESA ACT

Non-Answer on Armed Robot Pullout From Iraq Reveals Fragile Bot Industry - Popular Mech... - 0 views

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    oups ... pretty smart, they seem to have found the real aggressors :-)
ESA ACT

Johnson Electro Mechanical Systems - 0 views

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    he JTEC is an all solid-state engine that operates on the Ericsson cycle. Equivalent to Carnot, the Ericsson cycle offers the maximum theoretical efficiency available from an engine operating between two temperatures.
LeopoldS

The Future That Never Was - Next-Gen Tech Concepts - Popular Mechanics - 6 views

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    nice ideas ...
Joris _

Video: Seagull Robot Takes Off And Flies On Its Own, Just Like the Real Thing | Popular... - 5 views

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    Awesome, they managed. (this is a different deal as the micro ones )
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    haha, just what they need in holland ;) anyway this is impressive !
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    really nice - must not be that easy to control, correct?
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    when we tried (http://cas.ensmp.fr/~petit/site-oiseau-np/main.htm good old time :) ) the kinematic and mechanics were the big issues.
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    this looks like a very nice project back in 2005 ...
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    Does it also attack people to capture their fish & chips like those beasts we have here in St. Ives?
Marion Nachon

Galaxy collisions not the only source of monster black hole activity | Space | EarthSky - 1 views

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    In a surprise announcement earlier today (July 13), the European Southern Observatory said that monster black holes - those giants of millions or billions of solar masses, thought to lurk at the hearts of most galaxies - have a mechanism to become active other than galaxy collisions.
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    "A new study combining data from ESO's Very Large Telescope and ESA's XMM-Newton X-ray space observatory has turned up a surprise. Most of the huge black holes in the centers of galaxies in the past 11 billion years were not turned on by mergers between galaxies, as had been previously thought." and "The process that activates a sleeping black hole - turning its galaxy from quiet to active - has been a mystery in astronomy. What triggers the violent outbursts at a galaxy's center, which then becomes an active galactic nucleus? Up to now, many astronomers thought that most of these active nuclei were turned on when two galaxies merged, or when they passed close to each other and the disrupted material became fuel for the central black hole. Results of the new study indicate this idea may be wrong for many active galaxies." very interesting indeed
dejanpetkow

Torsional Carbon Nanotube Artificial Muscles - 0 views

  • Actuator materials producing rotation are rare and demonstrated rotations are small, though rotary systems like electric motors, pumps, turbines and compressors are widely needed and utilized. Present motors can be rather complex and, therefore, difficult to miniaturize. We show that a short electrolyte-filled twist spun carbon nanotube yarn, which is much thinner than a human hair, functions as a torsional artificial muscle in a simple three-electrode electrochemical system, providing a reversible 15,000° rotation and 590 revolutions/minute. A hydrostatic actuation mechanism, like for nature’s muscular hydrostats, explains the simultaneous occurrence of lengthwise contraction and torsional rotation during the yarn volume increase caused by electrochemical double-layer charge injection. Use of a torsional yarn muscle as a mixer for a fluidic chip is demonstrated.
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    I have no access to the pdf, but abstract sounds interesting.
Thijs Versloot

#LEGO car running on compressed air - 0 views

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    500000 lego bricks, a tank of compressed air, some mechanical engineering and a lot of time later...
Athanasia Nikolaou

New greenhouse effect - H2 and N2 do not absorb radiation on their own, but at high con... - 2 views

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    A new mechanism was discovered on how H2 and N2 participate in the radiation budget. This may help to resolve the "faint young sun paradox", a hypothesis according to which during the earlier age of the solar system when sun radiation had lower intensity than now, the earth was warmer. Extended, it could reassess the past habitability of Mars.
H H

Quantum Random Number Generator Created Using A Smartphone Camera - 1 views

shared by H H on 19 May 14 - No Cached
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    Physicists have exploited the laws of quantum mechanics to generate random numbers on a Nokia N9 smartphone, a breakthrough that could have major implications for information security
Thijs Versloot

Carbon nanotubes grow in combustion flames - 0 views

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    Quantum chemical simulations reveal an unprecedented relationship between the mechanism of carbon nanotube growth and hydrocarbon combustion processes. Results of these simulations illustrate the importance in the role of carbon chemical bonding and molecular transformations in CNT growth.
LeopoldS

Microsoft's Strange Quest for the Topological Qubit | MIT Technology Review - 2 views

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    loads of nice passwords - should we have a closer look at it? anybody volunteering? e.g. Anna and Daniel?
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    Just to add to this possible discussion, two important breakthroughs in Quantum Computing using Silicon were published last week (October 12th). Check it here: http://phys.org/news/2014-10-physicists-silicon-quantum.html
Thijs Versloot

A Groundbreaking Idea About Why Life Exists - 1 views

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    Jeremy England, a 31-year-old assistant professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has derived a mathematical formula that he believes explains this capacity. The formula, based on established physics, indicates that when a group of atoms is driven by an external source of energy (like the sun or chemical fuel) and surrounded by a heat bath (like the ocean or atmosphere), it will often gradually restructure itself in order to dissipate increasingly more energy. This could mean that under certain conditions, matter inexorably acquires the key physical attribute associated with life. The simulation results made me think of Jojo's attempts to make a self-assembling space structure. Seems he may have been on the right track, just not thinking big enough
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    :-P Thanks Thijs... I do not agree with the premise of the article that a possible correlation of energy dissipation in living systems and their fitness means that one is the cause for the other - it may just be that both go hand-in-hand because of the nature of the world that we live in. Maybe there is such a drive for pre-biotic systems (like crystals and amino acids), but once life as we know it exists (i.e., heredity + mutation) it is hard to see the need for an amendment of Darwin's principles. The following just misses the essence of Darwin: "If England's approach stands up to more testing, it could further liberate biologists from seeking a Darwinian explanation for every adaptation and allow them to think more generally in terms of dissipation-driven organization. They might find, for example, that "the reason that an organism shows characteristic X rather than Y may not be because X is more fit than Y, but because physical constraints make it easier for X to evolve than for Y to evolve." Darwin's principle in its simplest expression just says that if a genome is more effective at reproducing it is more likely to dominate the next generation. The beauty of it is that there is NO need for a steering mechanism (like maximize energy dissipation) any random set of mutations will still lead to an increase of reproductive effectiveness. BTW: what does "better at dissipating energy" even mean? If I run around all the time I will have more babies? Most species that prove to be very successful end up being very good at conserving energy: trees, turtles, worms. Even complexity of an organism is not a recipe for evolutionary success: jellyfish have been successful for hundreds of millions of years while polar bears are seem to be on the way out.
Paul N

Have We Been Interpreting Quantum Mechanics Wrong This Whole Time? - 6 views

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    "The experiments involve an oil droplet that bounces along the surface of a liquid. The droplet gently sloshes the liquid with every bounce. At the same time, ripples from past bounces affect its course. The droplet's interaction with its own ripples, which form what's known as a pilot wave, causes it to exhibit behaviors previously thought to be peculiar to elementary particles - including behaviors seen as evidence that these particles are spread through space like waves, without any specific location, until they are measured." Pilot-wave theory reresurrected. Maybe something for the next "fundamental" :P physics RF?
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    And for the next 'Experimental Physics Stagiaire' position why not try to do "Unpredictable Tunneling of a Classical Wave-Particle Association" http://stilton.tnw.utwente.nl/people/eddi/Papers/PhysRevLett_TUNNEL.pdf, there are some rumors online that the results of Yves Couder Experiments can be reproduced with simple DIY vibrating tables! It is very funny to see the videos of the MIT's replication of this experiment (with lightening legends for those who are uncomfortable with the concepts involved https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YF5iHQMjcsM)
LeopoldS

breaktrough in supercaps - 2 views

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    is this the breaktrough that we were waiting for?
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    That depends on what application you are thinking of. For circuit board electronics this will allow integration of micro sized supercapacitors to provide operational power. They will have to be fed by external batteries still, but the close proximity allows for better tailored power demands. They also propose tapping into thermal/mechanical energy to charge the supercaps. In the end, they can provide significant specific power (W/kg) but you still need to upscale the production to cover large areas to also gain high specific energy (Wh/kg). This breakthough is for micro sized applications, not for replacement of large scale energy storage (electric vehicles, satellites) going up to kWh. That said, I know of several studies in supercaps at ESA, but they are still qualifying current relatively old commercial solutions.
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