Science & Technology
This mobile launch facility is being developed by the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), the country's largest aerospace and defense contractor. Once fully operational, it will be used to launch light vehicles, as well as for building and maintaining rockets, satellites, and related space applications. As China's fifth launch facility, it will give the country's space program a new degree of flexibility.
The addition of a sea platform will also help mitigate the risk to populated areas. At present, all of China's other launch facilities are located inland at Jiuquan (northwest China), Taiyuan (north), Xichang (southwest), and the coastal site at Wenchang (south) on the island of Hainan. Launches from these locations often result in spent stages falling back to Earth, which requires extensive safety and cleanup operations.
A new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder suggests that such volcanic ash may also have a larger influence on the planet's climate than scientists previously suspected.
The new research, published in the journal Nature Communications, examines the eruption of Mount Kelut (or Kelud) on the Indonesian island of Java in 2014. Drawing on real-world observations of this event and advanced computer simulations, the team discovered that volcanic ash seems to be prone to loitering — remaining in the air for months or even longer after a major eruption.
Comment: Considering what appears to be an uptick in volcanic as well as comet and fireball activity, and their correlation with previous ice ages, it's likely we will have the rather unfortunate opportunity of witnessing the effects for ourselves:
- Volcanoes, Earthquakes And The 3,600 Year Comet Cycle
- Role of volcanoes in Younger Dryas global cooling revealed in Texas cave sediment
- Collapse of ozone layer correlated with mass extinction event 252 million years ago
- Professor Valentina Zharkova: "We entered the 'modern' Grand Solar Minimum on June 8, 2020"
Comment: One wonders what Earth's weakening magnetosphere will have on things:
- Massive, growing weak spot in Earth's magnetic field about to split in two says NASA
- Magnetic 'rivers' feed young stars
- Evidence of giant plasma structures above Earth say astronomers
The article, published Tuesday, was written by an OpenAI language generator called GPT-3, according to The Guardian. The robot was asked to explain why humans should not fear artificial intelligence. GPT-3 produced various essays that were compiled by editors into one article, according to an editor's note.
"For starters, I have no desire to wipe out humans," the robot assured readers. "In fact, I do not have the slightest interest in harming you in any way. Eradicating humanity seems like a rather useless endeavor to me. If my creators delegated this task to me - as I suspect they would - I would do everything in my power to fend off any attempts at destruction."
Comment: Many are calling foul, claiming the stunt was actually fixed and is a bad reflection of what AI is currently capable of.
From RT:
Guardian touts op-ed on why AI takeover won't happen as 'written by robot,' but tech-heads smell a human behind the trickSee also:
9 Sep, 2020 00:37
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While the Guardian claims that the soulless algorithm was asked to "write an essay for us from scratch," one has to read the editor's note below the purportedly AI-penned opus to see that the issue is more complicated. It says that the machine was fed a prompt asking it to "focus on why humans have nothing to fear from AI" and had several tries at the task.
After the robot came up with as many as eight essays, which the Guardian claims were all "unique, interesting and advanced a different argument," the very human editors cherry-picked "the best part of each" to make a coherent text out of them.
Although the Guardian said that it took its op-ed team even less time to edit GPT-3's musings than articles written by humans, tech experts and online pundits have cried foul, accusing the newspaper of "overhyping" the issue and selling their own thoughts under a clickbait title.
"Editor's note: Actually, we wrote the standfirst and the rather misleading headline. Also, the robot wrote eight times this much and we organised it to make it better..." tweeted Bloomberg Tax editor Joe Stanley-Smith.
Futurist Jarno Duursma, who wrote books on the Bitcoin Blockchain and artificial intelligence, agreed, saying that to portray an essay compiled by the Guardian as written completely by a robot is exaggeration.
"Exactly. GPT-3 created eight different essays. The Guardian journalists picked the best parts of each essay (!). After this manual selection they edited the article into a coherent article. That is not the same as 'this artificial intelligent system wrote this article.'"
Science researcher and writer Martin Robbins did not mince words, accusing the Guardian of an intent to deceive its readers about the AI's actual skills.
"Watching journalists cheat to make a tech company's algorithm seem more capable than it actually is.... just.... have people learned nothing from the last decade about the importance of good coverage of machine learning?" he wrote.
Mozilla fellow Daniel Leufer was even more bold in its criticism, calling the Guardian's stunt "an absolute joke."
"Rephrase: a robot didn't write this article, but a machine learning system produced 8 substandard, barely-readable texts based on being prompted with the exact structure the Guardian wanted," he summed up. He also spared no criticism for the piece itself, describing it as a patchwork that "still reads badly."
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The algorithm also ventured into woke territory, arguing that "Al should be treated with care and respect," and that "we need to give robots rights."
"Robots are just like us. They are made in our image," it - or perhaps the Guardian editorial board, in that instance - wrote.
- 'White' artificial intelligence risks exacerbating racial inequality, study suggests
- How to stop artificial intelligence being so racist and sexist
- Pentagon adopts new ethical principles for using Artificial Intelligence in war
- US government limits exports of artificial intelligence software
- France's armed forces minister: How Artificial Intelligence figures into operational superiority
- Artificial Intelligence examining ECGs predicts irregular heartbeat, death risk
- Artificial Intelligence will make our forever wars truly forever
Solar eclipses, therefore, are much more frequent than those here on Earth. Phobos passes in front of - but never entirely covers - the Sun for an annular or partial eclipse somewhere on Mars most sols. Because Phobos is moving so fast, it never transits for more than 30 seconds.
But, even during this brief time, the Mars InSight lander has recorded something peculiar happening.
To the surprise of Mars scientists, during Phobos eclipses, the lander's seismometer - the instrument that records ground motions to monitor possible quake activity - tilts, just an infinitesimal little bit, towards one side.

Galapagos sharks off the coast of Hawaii. The skeletons of sharks are made from cartilage rather than bone, but new evidence suggests they may have bony ancestors.
Bony fish, such as salmon and tuna, as well as almost all terrestrial vertebrates, from birds to humans, have skeletons that end up made of bone. However, the skeletons of sharks are made from a softer material called cartilage - even in adults.
Researchers have long explained the difference by suggesting that the last common ancestor of all jawed vertebrates had an internal skeleton of cartilage, with bony skeletons emerging after sharks had already evolved. The development was thought so important that living vertebrates are divided into "bony vertebrates" and "cartilaginous vertebrates" as a result.
Comment: Could it be that so many of the theories of how particular creatures evolved are being overturned because the mainstream theory of evolution is fundamentally flawed?
- The Probability of Evolution
- Darwinism, Creationism... How About Neither?
- The many wonders of butterflies and how they evolve by design
- New paper confirms trilobite explosion during Cambrian - appeared out of nowhere with no visible ancestors
- In Cambrian Explosion Debate, Intelligent Design Wins by Default
- "Mindblowing" haul of fossils over 500 million years old unearthed in China
- The Truth Perspective: Mind the Gaps: Locating the Intelligence in Evolution and Design
- The Truth Perspective: Are Cells the Intelligent Designers? Why Creationists and Darwinists Are Both Wrong
Scientists on an experiment at the Large Hadron Collider see massive W particles emerging from collisions with electromagnetic fields. How can this happen?
The Large Hadron Collider plays with Albert Einstein's famous equation, E = mc², to transform matter into energy and then back into different forms of matter. But on rare occasions, it can skip the first step and collide pure energy — in the form of electromagnetic waves.
Last year, the ATLAS experiment at the LHC observed two photons, particles of light, ricocheting off one another and producing two new photons. This year, they've taken that research a step further and discovered photons merging and transforming into something even more interesting: W bosons, particles that carry the weak force, which governs nuclear decay.
This research doesn't just illustrate the central concept governing processes inside the LHC: that energy and matter are two sides of the same coin. It also confirms that at high enough energies, forces that seem separate in our everyday lives — electromagnetism and the weak force — are united.

Ganymede and Europa, the largest and smallest of Jupiter's four Galilean moons, cast their shadows on Jupiter. The newly discovered detections reported here are evidence of much smaller moons in farther-out orbits.
Over the past 20 years, astronomers have found dozens of small Jovian moons thanks to the advance of large digital cameras. Back in 2003, Scott Sheppard (Carnegie Institution of Science) already estimated that the number of irregular moons larger than a kilometer would probably be around one hundred.
Now, Edward Ashton, Matthew Beaudoin, and Brett Gladman (University of British Columbia, Vancouver) have detected about four dozen possible new Jovian moons that are even smaller. Extrapolating from the sky area they have searched (about one square degree), they conclude that there could be some 600 of these tiny objects orbiting the giant planet.
The team studied 60 archival 140-second exposures of a field close to Jupiter, all of them taken within a 3-hour period on September 8, 2010, with the 340-megapixel MegaPrime camera at the Canada-France-Hawai'i Telescope on Mauna Kea. The astronomers digitally combined the images in 126 different ways, one for every possible combination of speed and direction at which a potential Jovian moon might move across the sky.

Appearing like a light veil across the sky, it is actually the outer edge of a supernova remnant from an explosion that blasted apart a dying star up to 20,000 years ago
An image of a 'delicate supernova blast wave' seen draped across the sky 2,400 light years from Earth, has been captured by the NASA Hubble Space Telescope.
Appearing like a light veil across the sky, it is actually the outer edge of a supernova remnant from an explosion that blasted apart a dying star up to 20,000 years ago.
The European Space Agency (ESA), a partner in the Hubble telescope, said the exploding star would have been about 20 times more massive than our Sun.
Funded by Bill Gates, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) researchers have developed a clandestine way to record your vaccination history: storing the data in a pattern of dye or tattoo ink, invisible to the naked eye, that is slipped under the skin hidden in your vaccine.
"This technology could enable the rapid and anonymous detection of patient vaccination history to ensure that every child is vaccinated," says Kevin McHugh, a former MIT postdoc who is now an assistant professor of bioengineering at Rice University.McHugh and former visiting scientist Lihong Jing are the lead authors of the study, which appears today in Science Translational Medicine. Ana Jaklenec, a research scientist at MIT's Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, and Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor at MIT, are the senior authors of the paper.
The researchers showed that their new dye, which consists of nanocrystals called quantum dots, can remain for at least five years under the skin, where it emits near-infrared light that can be detected by a specially equipped smartphone.











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