Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘transportation’ category: Page 249

Dec 19, 2021

Lightest Sound Insulation Ever Created Will Make Aircraft Engines 80% Quieter

Posted by in categories: government, transportation

In aviation, any advancement in design must either reduce weight or the benefit has to be worth the extra weight. Researchers at the University of Bath seem to have achieved the perfect balance between the two by developing a way to reduce aircraft engine noise by up to 80% while adding almost no extra weight.

As Green Car Congress reports, the research team at the University of Bath developed a graphene oxide-polyvinyl alcohol aerogel, which only weighs 2.1kg (4.6lbs) per cubic meter and therefore makes it the lightest sound insulation ever manufactured.


Researchers developed a graphene aerogel that reduces engine noise to the same level as a hair dryer.

Continue reading “Lightest Sound Insulation Ever Created Will Make Aircraft Engines 80% Quieter” »

Dec 19, 2021

Elation Unveils a Prototype of Its 1,400 HP Electric Hypercar, and It’s Named After a Hunting Dog

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

Exactly one month ago today, Elation Hypercars threw its hat into the ring and unveiled its first four-wheeled beast known as Freedom. The all-electric hypercar, which promises a staggering 1,400 horses and a 400-mile range, is due to be delivered in 2022 and now has its first prototype.


It was named after a hunting dog and is equally fierce.

Dec 18, 2021

On December 17, 1903, Wilbur and Orville Wright made four brief flights four miles south of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina with their first powered aircraft

Posted by in categories: engineering, transportation

The Wright brothers had designed the world’s first successful, heavier-than-air, powered airplane.

Find U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)-funded research about the Wright brothers’ innovative approach to development on OSTI.GOV:
• Accelerating Learning with Set-Based Concurrent Engineering: https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1605517
• Control Co-Design: An engineering game changer: https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1615248
• Engineering a Better Future: Interplay between Engineering Social Sciences and Innovation: https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1530161

Dec 17, 2021

‘Technology superhighway’ rising between Dell, Samsung

Posted by in categories: economics, transportation

Will this be the most exciting stretch of land in all of Central Texas in the coming years? It has investors and developers salivating.

Dec 17, 2021

Audi opening a unique charging hub concept with 320 kW chargers and exclusive upstairs lounge

Posted by in category: transportation

Next week, Audi will open what it is calling “world’s first” charging hub concept in Nuremberg, Germany, complete with reservation options and a lounge area. Audi’s pilot project is intended to test charging solutions for the impending demand for EV infrastructure, particularly in urban areas where drivers might not have access to charging at home.

Audi AG is a German automaker founded over 100 years ago. Known for its automotive offerings in the luxury and performance segment, the company has recently begun to shift its vehicle lineup toward electrification, following suit with its parent company Volkswagen Group.

This past summer, Audi announced its electrification strategy, which includes an end date of 2033 for all new ICE models.

Dec 17, 2021

Boeing Says It’s Going to Build a New Airplane Model. In the Metaverse?

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Welcome to Web 3.0.

It’s happening.

Major human-focused industries are injecting virtual interactions into the very design of next-gen vehicles, as Boeing announced that its 3D engineering designs will have digital twins that speak to each other via “robots” that converse, while human mechanics at factories throughout the world will be linked via $3,500 HoloLens headsets developed by Microsoft itself, according to an initial report from Reuters.

Continue reading “Boeing Says It’s Going to Build a New Airplane Model. In the Metaverse?” »

Dec 17, 2021

A Man Accidentally Threw Out a Hard Drive Worth $357 Million in Bitcoin

Posted by in categories: bitcoin, computing, cryptocurrencies, transportation

And he’s been searching for it for a decade.

It’s a nightmare scenario that might become increasingly common in a world of digital currency. A man threw away an old PC hard drive while doing a quick spring clean of his home in Newport Wales, U.K., in 2013. Fast-forward almost a decade and he’s still desperately petitioning to be allowed to go through his local landfill.

The reason the man, 35-year-old IT engineer James Howells, wants to trawl through his local trash site is that the hard drive he threw out included a wallet with 7,500 Bitcoin.

Continue reading “A Man Accidentally Threw Out a Hard Drive Worth $357 Million in Bitcoin” »

Dec 16, 2021

Elon Musk says he’ll pay more taxes than ‘any American in history’

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, sustainability, transportation

Elon Musk, the billionaire CEO of Tesla, is defending himself once again against public criticism. It is time for Tesla CEO Elon Musk to answer to questions regarding his income tax bill.

“If you opened your eyes for two seconds, you would know that I will pay more taxes than any American in history this year.” Musk tweeted earlier this week.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk tweeted a reaction to Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s criticism of him as Time Magazine’s Person of the Year for not paying his taxes.

Dec 16, 2021

Data-frugal deep learning optimizes microstructure imaging

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation

Most often, we recognize deep learning as the magic behind self-driving cars and facial recognition, but what about its ability to safeguard the quality of the materials that make up these advanced devices? Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Elizabeth Holm and Ph.D. student Bo Lei have adopted computer vision methods for microstructural images that not only require a fraction of the data deep learning typically relies on but can save materials researchers an abundance of time and money.

Quality control in materials processing requires the analysis and classification of complex material microstructures. For instance, the properties of some high strength steels depend on the amount of lath-type bainite in the material. However, the process of identifying bainite in microstructural images is time-consuming and expensive as researchers must first use two types of to take a closer look and then rely on their own expertise to identify bainitic regions. “It’s not like identifying a person crossing the street when you’re driving a car,” Holm explained “It’s very difficult for humans to categorize, so we will benefit a lot from integrating a .”

Their approach is very similar to that of the wider computer-vision community that drives facial recognition. The model is trained on existing material microstructure images to evaluate new images and interpret their classification. While companies like Facebook and Google train their models on millions or billions of images, materials scientists rarely have access to even ten thousand images. Therefore, it was vital that Holm and Lei use a “data-frugal method,” and train their model using only 30–50 microscopy images. “It’s like learning how to read,” Holm explained. “Once you’ve learned the alphabet you can apply that knowledge to any book. We are able to be data-frugal in part because these systems have already been trained on a large database of natural images.”

Dec 15, 2021

Elon Musk says no other CEO in the world cares as much about safety as he does

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI, transportation

Elon Musk told the FT that Tesla owners should read all the details about the company’s self-driving software when they order the vehicle.