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The temperature of your face could help diagnose medical conditions

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 11:11am
Small changes to the temperature of your cheeks, nose and around your eyes could let an AI estimate how old you are and flag issues like diabetes and high blood pressure
Categories: Science

What was behind the 2021-2022 energy crisis within Europe?

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
A team of researchers had already been working with electricity price data for years before Russia's invasion of Ukraine, exploring statistics and developing forecasting methods. Now they zero in on how prices in different countries relate and how countries were affected by the energy crisis and address the interdependencies of different markets. Their approach combines statistical physics and network science, identifying communities and the fundamental spatiotemporal patterns within the electricity price/time data from all countries. The researchers hope their work will strengthen the European perspective in the political debate about electricity markets and prices, because problems like this are best tackled via international cooperation.
Categories: Science

Nuclear spectroscopy breakthrough could rewrite the fundamental constants of nature

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
Raising the energy state of an atom's nucleus using a laser, or exciting it, would enable development of the most accurate atomic clocks ever to exist. This has been hard to do because electrons, which surround the nucleus, react easily with light, increasing the amount of light needed to reach the nucleus. By causing the electrons to bond with fluorine in a transparent crystal, UCLA physicists have finally succeeded in exciting the neutrons in a thorium atom's nucleus using a moderate amount of laser light. This accomplishment means that measurements of time, gravity and other fields that are currently performed using atomic electrons can be made with orders of magnitude higher accuracy.
Categories: Science

Optoelectronics gain spin control from chiral perovskites and III-V semiconductors

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
A research effort has made advances that could enable a broader range of currently unimagined optoelectronic devices.
Categories: Science

Optoelectronics gain spin control from chiral perovskites and III-V semiconductors

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
A research effort has made advances that could enable a broader range of currently unimagined optoelectronic devices.
Categories: Science

Study explores what motivates people to watch footage of disasters and extreme weather

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
The release in July 2024 of the blockbuster film Twisters (centred around a social-media celebrity storm-chaser) demonstrates an ongoing public fascination in hazards and extreme weather. The arrival of camera and streaming technologies have made it easier to collect and share such footage in recent years, resulting in often dramatic footage being live-streamed on platforms such as YouTube, TikTok and Discord. Now, a new study has analyzed what might be motivating people to watch these streams -- in some instances for up to 12 hours at a time.
Categories: Science

Study explores what motivates people to watch footage of disasters and extreme weather

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
The release in July 2024 of the blockbuster film Twisters (centred around a social-media celebrity storm-chaser) demonstrates an ongoing public fascination in hazards and extreme weather. The arrival of camera and streaming technologies have made it easier to collect and share such footage in recent years, resulting in often dramatic footage being live-streamed on platforms such as YouTube, TikTok and Discord. Now, a new study has analyzed what might be motivating people to watch these streams -- in some instances for up to 12 hours at a time.
Categories: Science

Exploring the chemical space of the exposome: How far have we gone?

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
Scientists have taken on the daunting challenge of mapping all the chemicals around us. They take inventory of the available science and conclude that currently a real pro-active chemical management is not feasible. To really get a grip on the vast and expanding chemical universe, they advocate the use of machine learning and AI, complementing existing strategies for detecting and identifying all molecules we are exposed to.
Categories: Science

Exploring the chemical space of the exposome: How far have we gone?

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
Scientists have taken on the daunting challenge of mapping all the chemicals around us. They take inventory of the available science and conclude that currently a real pro-active chemical management is not feasible. To really get a grip on the vast and expanding chemical universe, they advocate the use of machine learning and AI, complementing existing strategies for detecting and identifying all molecules we are exposed to.
Categories: Science

Crucial gaps in climate risk assessment methods

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
Researchers have uncovered significant flaws in current climate risk assessment techniques that could lead to a severe underestimation of climate-related financial losses for businesses and investors.
Categories: Science

Neutrons on classically inexplicable paths

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
Is nature really as strange as quantum theory says -- or are there simpler explanations? New neutron measurements prove: It doesn't work without the strange properties of quantum theory.
Categories: Science

Neutrons on classically inexplicable paths

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
Is nature really as strange as quantum theory says -- or are there simpler explanations? New neutron measurements prove: It doesn't work without the strange properties of quantum theory.
Categories: Science

True scale of carbon impact from long-distance travel revealed

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
The reality of the climate impact of long-distance passenger travel has been revealed in new research.
Categories: Science

Researchers unlock 'materials genome', opening possibilities for next-generation design

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:55am
A new microscopy method has allowed researchers to detect tiny changes in the atomic-level architecture of crystalline materials -- like advanced steels for ship hulls and custom silicon for electronics. The technique could advance our ability to understand the fundamental origins of materials properties and behavior.
Categories: Science

Moving beyond the 80-year-old solar cell equation

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:54am
Physicists have made a significant breakthrough in solar cell technology by developing a new analytical model that improves the understanding and efficiency of thin-film photovoltaic (PV) devices.
Categories: Science

Moving beyond the 80-year-old solar cell equation

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:54am
Physicists have made a significant breakthrough in solar cell technology by developing a new analytical model that improves the understanding and efficiency of thin-film photovoltaic (PV) devices.
Categories: Science

Implantable microphone could lead to fully internal cochlear implants

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 10:54am
Researchers developed a prototype of an implantable microphone for a cochlear implant. Their device, which senses the movement of the ear drum in the inner ear, performed as well as commercial hearing aids and could someday enable a fully internalized cochlear implant.
Categories: Science

Ants amputate their nestmates’ limbs to save them from infection

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 9:00am
Ants are one of the few animals that tend to the injuries of their peers, and now it seems they are also the first non-humans known to perform life-saving amputations
Categories: Science

How ghost cities in the Amazon are rewriting the story of civilisation

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 9:00am
Remote sensing, including lidar, reveals that the Amazon was once home to millions of people. The emerging picture of how they lived challenges ideas of human cultural evolution
Categories: Science

Could We Replace Ingenuity With a Swarm of Robotic Bees?

Universe Today Feed - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 8:07am

Humans finally achieved controlled flight on another planet for the first time just a few years ago. Ingenuity, the helicopter NASA sent to Mars, performed that difficult task admirably. It is now taking a well-deserved rest until some intrepid human explorer someday comes by to pick it up and hopefully put it in a museum somewhere. But what if, instead of a quadcopter, NASA used a series of flexible-wing robots akin to bees to explore the Martian terrain? That was the idea behind the Marsbee proposal by Chang-Kwon Kang and his colleagues at the University of Alabama at Huntsville. The project was supported by a NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) grant back in 2018 – let’s see what they did with it.

The concept was initially inspired by work at the University of Tokyo on a dragonfly-like micro aerial vehicle (MAV). It is one of the few drones able to fly in Earth’s gravity using flexible wings that flap. But would it be useful on Mars?

Mars has both advantages and disadvantages compared to Earth when considering whether flexible wing flight is possible. In the advantage column, it has about ? of the gravity of our home planet, so less force is necessary for an aircraft to lift off. However, there is only about 1% of the atmosphere on Mars compared to Earth, so a flexible-wing aircraft would have significantly less atmosphere to push off to create that force.

Fraser explains Ingenuity’s final fate.

Ultimately, part of the Phase I project for the Marsbee grant was to determine whether the approach was feasible. But why do so in the first place? Ingenuity, known at the time as the Mars 2020 Helicopter, was already on the path to conducting the first powered flight on another planet. While it was successful at its stated mission, it had several downsides, including a relatively large size, which is at a premium on interplanetary trips, and a flight time limited to only about 3 minutes. 

Neither of those limitations was a show-stopper, obviously, but a flexible-wing aircraft that is smaller and lighter could solve both of those problems. Engineers could potentially even store multiple craft in the same space as what Ingenuity needed in its ride-along with Perseverance. But would they work?

The short answer appears to be “not without additional technical development.” Modeling of the design showed weaknesses in a few areas that must be addressed before launching any successful Marsbee mission. The biggest hurdle appeared to be how flexible structures, like those that would make up the system’s wings, interacted with the uncertain aerodynamic environment of the Red Planet. 

Video describing the Marsbee concept.
Credit – NASA 360 YouTube Channel

Other challenges include the weight of the battery pack and the development of a guidance and control system that could deal with the randomly windy Martian atmosphere while remaining small and light enough to fit on a flexible wing flyer. Also, it would be challenging to direct the flyers without a GPS, which doesn’t yet exist on Mars.

For now, efforts to develop Marsbees seem to have been put on hold, at least for the last several years. With the success of Ingenuity, many questions about the feasibility of flight on the Red Planet have already been answered. But with a little more technical development and derisking, it might be possible that someday we’ll see flights of robotic bees buzzing around the Red Planet.

Learn More:
Kang et al. – Marsbee – Swarm of Flapping Wing Flyers for Enhanced Mars Exploration
UT – The Ingenuity Team Downloads the Final Data from the Mars Helicopter. The Mission is Over
UT – A Helicopter is Going to Titan. Could an Airplane be Next?
UT – Cruising the Cloud Tops of Venus With a Solar-Powered Airplane

Lead Image:
Artist’s depiction of the Marsbee concept.
Credit – Kang et al.

The post Could We Replace Ingenuity With a Swarm of Robotic Bees? appeared first on Universe Today.

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