Archive for the ‘military’ category: Page 213
Mar 21, 2019
The Air Force Is Building AI to Fly Fighter Jets Called “Skyborg”
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: military, robotics/AI
Mar 20, 2019
The U.S. Military is Buying a Brutal-Looking Powered Exoskeleton
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: cyborgs, military
The partnership could greatly enhance the productivity of a single officer in the field and decrease fatigue or strain — but the USSOCOM didn’t reveal the exact intended use case for the exoskeleton, which lets the wearer heft 200 pounds (90 kg).
Forklift Arms
It’s the latest sign that exoskeletons are finally hitting the mainstream. Automobile manufacturers are already considering the use of simpler exoskeletons on factory floors. And the Food and Drug Administration approved a lower-body exoskeleton last year for use by people with lower limb disabilities.
Mar 20, 2019
Project aims to tame noise from supersonic military jets with ‘swirl’ technology
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: engineering, health, military
It’s cliché to describe something very noisy as “louder than a jet engine.” But supersonic jet engines, like those powering fighters flown by the U.S. military, are so much louder than regular jet engines that scientists have a special term for their sound—” broadband shock-associated noise.”
Now, a team of faculty and students from the Department of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Kansas will design and test innovative technologies to cut noise from supersonic military jets. The U.S. Department of Defense’s Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP), the DoD’s environmental science and technology program, is supporting a one-year, $200,000 effort at KU, with the potential to expand that support in the years ahead.
Mar 20, 2019
Budget Docs Show Pentagon Aims To Loft Particle Beam Anti-Missile Weapon Into Space In Four Years
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: military, particle physics, space
After three decades, the Pentagon is betting big on their belief that a dream of the Star Wars initiative may now be closer to a practical concept.
Mar 18, 2019
The steering wheel in an F1 race car requires fighter jet components and lots of practice
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: military
Mar 17, 2019
Pentagon Wants to Test A Space-Based Weapon in 2023
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: existential risks, military, particle physics, satellites
Defense officials have asked for $304 million to fund research into space-based lasers, particle beams, and other new forms of missile defense next year.
Defense officials want to test a neutral particle-beam in orbit in fiscal 2023 as part of a ramped-up effort to explore various types of space-based weaponry. They’ve asked for $304 million in the 2020 budget to develop such beams, more powerful lasers, and other new tech for next-generation missile defense. Such weapons are needed, they say, to counter new missiles from China, Russia, North Korea and Iran. But just figuring out what might work is a difficult technical challenge.
So the Pentagon is undertaking two studies. The first is a $15 million exploration of whether satellites outfitted with lasers might be able to disable enemy missiles coming off the launch pad. Defense officials have said previously that these lasers would need to be in the megawatt class. They expect to finish the study within six months.
Continue reading “Pentagon Wants to Test A Space-Based Weapon in 2023” »
Mar 14, 2019
Deep-Sea Explorers Discover Wreck of WWII Aircraft Carrier USS Wasp
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: military
More than 70 years after it was torpedoed and sunk during the World War II Battle of Guadalcanal, the aircraft carrier USS Wasp has been discovered in the Coral Sea.
Wasp was spotted on the seabed, in 14,000 feet of water, by the research vessel (RV) Petrel, part of a research organization established by Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen, in January.
Continue reading “Deep-Sea Explorers Discover Wreck of WWII Aircraft Carrier USS Wasp” »
Mar 12, 2019
New understanding of sophistication of microbial warfare
Posted by Xavier Rosseel in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, military
Scientists have known for a century that viruses attack and sometimes kill bacteria, much the way humans come down with the flu. But only recently have they begun to understand the biochemistry that happens as bacteria and virus strive for competitive advantage, with far-reaching implications for medicine and more.
Researchers explain how viruses make a molecular decoy that is used to subvert the CRISPR-Cas bacterial immune system.
Mar 9, 2019
Bizarre Malware Is Disabling Safety Systems at Industrial Plants
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: cybercrime/malcode, military
What’s most worrisome, one source told MIT Tech, was that the malware crosses a new ethical line.
“Targeting safety systems just seemed to be off limits morally and really hard to do technically,” Joe Slowik, a former information warfare officer in the US Navy who now works at Dragos, an industrial cybersecurity firm that’s been tracking the spread of Triton, told the magazine.