Archive for the ‘space’ category: Page 281
Dec 20, 2022
Europe Gets an Exascale Supercomputer
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: space, supercomputing
Weekly science podcast produced by the SGU Productions llc. Also provides blogs, forums, videos and resources.
Dec 19, 2022
A 107-year-old Einstein theory about how the universe began, Which is 100% correct
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: space
Read more about A 107-year-old Einstein theory about how the universe began, Which is 100% correct.
Dec 19, 2022
Perturbation theory of large scale structure in the $ LambdaCDM Universe: Exact time evolution and the two-loop power spectrum
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: energy, space
The large-scale structure (LSS) of the Universe is obviously nonlinear and very complicated. However, the scale of onset of nonlinearity is well separated from the size of the Universe which makes a large portion of the structure formation modes accessible to perturbation theory (PT). The latter is itself complicated by the time dependence of the lambdaCDM background. The authors provide an exact all-order recursive solution for the PT kernels, which allows them to go beyond the Einstein-de Sitter approximation for the time dependence, and quantify the deviation at the two-loop level in the 10% range, a deviation detectible with upcoming observations.
Dec 19, 2022
Space Renaissance Christmas Special 2022
Posted by Adriano Autino in categories: law, space, sustainability
The last event of 2022 will take place December 19th: Christmas Special meeting. with our president Prof. Bernard Foing!
We’ll have a look at what we have done in 2022, and we’ll announce the program of 2023.
The Zoom meeting will be open to all of the SRI Members and invited friends – just registered or going to register during the meeting.
All the participants will have the possibility to make questions to the SRI President, the Founder and the Board of Directors, about the 2023 program. Criticisms and proposals will be welcome too.
We have a huge programme for 2023, and we are going through some key steps, to achieve an higher legal status for our association: to be registered as a not for profit entity on the Unic National Register of the Third Sector Entities (RUNTS). Such an achievement will allow SRI to call Italian taxpayers to target the 5×1000 of their yearly tax to SRI, and the donations to be deducted from the tax declaration. These conditions, when achieved, will greatly contribute to the sustainability of our initiatives.
We are asking each of the SRI members and supporters to assume this priority for December 2022: to bring onboard many new members and to seek for donors and sponsors!
We will celebrate together during the Xmas Special event and exchange season greetings and wishes for a vibrant year 2023 for Space Renaissance International!
Dec 19, 2022
Mercury’s superconductivity explained at long last
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: space
More than 100 years ago, the physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes discovered that solid mercury acts as.
Dec 18, 2022
NVIDIA’s Revolutionary AI CREATES Text to 3D models in minutes!
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: robotics/AI, space
You can now create high resolution 3D mesh models from text in just minutes using Magic3D, an amazing new AI!
Follow Me or AI will not be your friend!
Continue reading “NVIDIA’s Revolutionary AI CREATES Text to 3D models in minutes!” »
Dec 18, 2022
Scientists may have discovered two water worlds
Posted by Paul Battista in category: space
Two planets that astronomers discovered on the Kepler mission may not be the rocky, Earth-like bodies that we originally believed. Instead, a new study suggests that they could be two water worlds, and that they are less dense than astronomers originally posited. What’s intriguing about these worlds is that they are believed to be somewhat similar to Europa, which is a rocky core encased in water and capped in ice.
Dec 18, 2022
Physicists Rewrite a Quantum Rule That Clashes With Our Universe
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: quantum physics, space
The past and the future are tightly linked in conventional quantum mechanics. Perhaps too tightly. A tweak to the theory could let quantum possibilities increase as space expands.