Archive for the ‘military’ category: Page 203
Aug 1, 2019
Pentagon: New Laser Tech Can Make People Hear Voice Commands
Posted by Paul Battista in category: military
Jul 31, 2019
High-power Military Lasers: The Pentagon’s laser weapon plans expand
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: energy, military
Solid state laser :3.
Advances in high-energy solid-state lasers and encouraging results from field trials show expanded capabilities of recent U.S military laser prototypes.
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Jul 30, 2019
Transparent Aluminum — Star Trek Technology is now Real
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: computing, military
ALON — Transparent Aluminum — is a ceramic composed of Aluminium, Oxygen and Nitrogen. Transparent Aluminum, was once pure science fiction, a technical term used in a Star Trek Movie from the 80’s.
In the movie Star Trek 4 The Voyage Home, Captain Kirk and his team, go back in time to acquire 2 whales from the past and transport them back to the future. Scotty needed some materials to make a holding tank for whales on his ship, but had no money to pay for the materials.
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Jul 28, 2019
The Crazy V-Bat Vertical Takeoff And Landing Drone Could Be A Game Changer
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: drones, law enforcement, military
The Navy sent its expeditionary fast transport ship USNS Spearhead to sea to experiment with a number of cutting-edge technologies last week, including MartinUAV’s novel V-Bat drone. V-Bat is capable of infrastructure-independent vertical takeoff and landings while also retaining the high efficiency of a fixed-wing aircraft for long-endurance missions. Seeing as it can be launched and recovered in a nine square meter area and even in dense urban terrain, as well as on the tight decks of ships, the drone could have a lot of applications in the military, law enforcement/first responder, industrial, and environmental monitoring sectors.
Jul 28, 2019
The past Porton Down can’t hide
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in categories: health, military
I am aware of many “Small Studies” that produced undeniable results.
Tucked away in 7,000 acres of beautiful Wiltshire countryside lies one of Britain’s most infamous scientific establishments. Porton Down, founded in 1916, is the oldest chemical warfare research installation in the world. The tight secrecy which has surrounded the establishment for decades has fed the growth of all sorts of myths and rumours about its experiments. One Whitehall official once remarked that Porton had an image of “a sinister and nefarious establishment”.
The Porton experiments on humans have attracted a good deal of criticism. It is, for example, alleged that the human “guinea pigs’ — drawn from the armed forces and supposedly all volunteers — were duped into taking part in the tests. There are still concerns that the tests have damaged the long-term health of the human subjects.
Jul 26, 2019
Neutrino beam could neutralise nuclear bombs
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: military, particle physics
By Will Knight
A super-powered neutrino generator could in theory be used to instantly destroy nuclear weapons anywhere on the planet, according to a team of Japanese scientists.
If it was ever built, a state could use the device to obliterate the nuclear arsenal of its enemy by firing a beam of neutrinos straight through the Earth. But the generator would need to be more than a hundred times more powerful than any existing particle accelerator and over 1000 kilometres wide.
Jul 26, 2019
The X3 Ion Thruster Is Here, This Is How It’ll Get Us to Mars
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: military, space travel
The X3 is made possible thanks to a collaboration among NASA, Aerojet Rocketdyne, the Caltech Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and the University of Michigan.
It’s a new type of propulsion engine that smashed records during test firings. This engine and other electric propulsion systems will help us reach distant planets faster than ever before.
Continue reading “The X3 Ion Thruster Is Here, This Is How It’ll Get Us to Mars” »
Jul 21, 2019
The military’s future body armor could be as thin as 2 atoms
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: military, particle physics, weapons
If you’ve been a grunt, then you probably have a love-hate relationship with body armor. You love having it in a firefight — it can save your life by stopping or slowing bullets and fragments — but you hate how heavy it is — it’s often around 25 pounds for the armor and outer tactical vest (more if you add the plate inserts to stop up to 7.62 mm rounds).
It’s bulky — and you really can’t move as well in it. In fact, in one firefight, a medic removed his body armor to reach wounded allies, earning a Distinguished Service Cross.
Imagine if the body armor were just another part of your clothes, like a light jacket. Imagine not having to haul around those extra 30 pounds. Well, troops may not have to imagine much longer. According to a release from the Advanced Science Research Center at the City University of New York, body armor could soon have the thickness of just two atoms. This is due to how graphene acts under certain conditions.