Monday 27 February 2017

This week in space: rockets, telescopes, and exoplanets

Trappist monks are pretty cool: they’re widely appreciated for their excellent bread, preserves, and beer. At the ESO facility in the Atacama, one of their telescopes is named TRAPPIST, in homage to the monks. That telescope was used to discover seven earthlike exoplanets around TRAPPIST-1, a nearby ultracool dwarf star. Follow-up with the Spitzer space telescope revealed that all seven of those planets orbit much closer than Mercury orbits our sun, and they all transit the star. Three are within the habitable zone.

Friday 24 February 2017

New leak points to release dates for Samsung Galaxy S8 and LG G6

It’s getting to be that time of year when the big Android device makers release their flagship phones in quick succession. Hometown South Korean rivals Samsung and LG have been duking it out in recent years with near-simultaneous releases, but this time LG may have a few weeks all to itself. A leak from ETNews claims to have release dates for the LG G6 and the Galaxy S8.
LG took it on the chin in 2016 when consumers didn’t get on-board with its modular design, leading to substantial losses in the company’s mobile division. After a reorganization, the LG V20 was tweaked to offer a more premium feel and no module chin in late 2016. Now, the LG G6 is on the way. It’s been thoroughly leaked, and an announcement is expected at Mobile World Congress in a few days.

Monday 20 February 2017

Efficient power converter for internet of things

The "internet of things" is the idea that vehicles, appliances, civil structures, manufacturing equipment, and even livestock will soon have sensors that report information directly to networked servers, aiding with maintenance and the coordination of tasks.
Those sensors will have to operate at very low powers, in order to extend battery life for months or make do with energy harvested from the environment. But that means that they'll need to draw a wide range of electrical currents. A sensor might, for instance, wake up every so often, take a measurement, and perform a small calculation to see whether that measurement crosses some threshold. Those operations require relatively little current, but occasionally, the sensor might need to transmit an alert to a distant radio receiver. That requires much larger currents.
Generally, power converters, which take an input voltage and convert it to a steady output voltage, are efficient only within a narrow range of currents. But at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference last week, researchers from MIT's Microsystems Technologies Laboratories (MTL) presented a new power converter that maintains its efficiency at currents ranging from 500 picoamps to 1 milliamp, a span that encompasses a 200,000-fold increase in current levels.

Saturday 18 February 2017

Project Loon uses machine learning to make internet balloons ‘dance on the wind’

The aptly named Project Loon started as a “moonshot” experiment at Google’s X division in 2011. The goal was to provide wireless internet access to remote areas with high-altitude balloons, which does indeed sound loony. It has become one of the most well-known endeavors by X, now a division of Google’s parent company Alphabet. It’s not just a wacky idea anymore — it’s starting to work. X has announced improvements to its navigation algorithm that could vastly reduce the number of balloons needed to cover an area.

Friday 17 February 2017

Space & Sound Used to Help Visually Impaired Navigate with the HoloLens

We live in a marvelous age, a time where technology is driving us forward as a species at a rapid pace, and tech-driven miracles are becoming more and more commonplace. While the human race may not be focused on building the largest wonders of the world, as it once was in history, the current order of wonders are much smaller in scale—even internal.
Medical technology has made leaps and bounds in recent history. Sensory disabilities such as sight and hearing have long been an unrepairable issue, but these fields have started to become far less of a mystery. With over 4 million suffering from a hearing disability in the United States, and about 7.5 million suffering from blindness, it may be encouraging news to think that we are at a stage in development where 4 out of 5 cases of blindness are preventable or curable, with the other fifth of those cases likely being curable in the near future.