GAO Discusses Orion Heat Shield Anomaly Root Cause, Artemis 3 Internal Schedule – AmericaSpace

Earlier today (June 20th), the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a sweeping report on the status of the largest NASA programs which are currently in development [1].The report itself was not unexpected; the GAO produces similar documents on an annual basis.However, this report provided unique insights into the challenges which NASA is encountering as it attempts to implement Artemis, the most ambitious human spaceflight initiative in half a century.Many of these pieces of information had not been previously released to the public.Most notably, the report disclosed one probable root cause for the unexpected behavior of Artemis 1s heat shield: the low permeability of its ablative material.It also revealed that NASAs internal baseline target date for Artemis 3, the programs first lunar landing, is February of 2028.This casts doubt on the feasibility of a lunar landing in 2026, as is publicly planned.Finally, the report stated that Axiom Space is facing challenges with recruiting engineers to develop the lunar EVA suits which astronauts will wear during Artemis 3.

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is an independent agency, butit provides a crucial service for NASAand other federal agencies.Its mission is to investigate allegations of corruption and to verify that taxpayer dollars are spent efficiently and responsibly by the government.For the past 16 years, the GAO has produced annual reports on NASAs major projects.This responsibility was created at the behest of the House Appropriations Committee in its 2009 appropriations bill [2].In this context, major projects are defined as missions which costs at least 250 million dollars, take multiple years to complete, and are in development rather than operations.

The GAOs most recent assessment began in April of 2023 and continued through June of 2024.Cost overruns and schedule slips (if any) were documented for 36 major projects.In addition, the report contained information on pending issues which could potentially impact the schedule and budget for each mission in the future.Broadly, NASA is improving its management of its portfolio.In aggregate, the missions which were audited this year have produced $4.4 billion in cost overruns and 14.6 years of delays.This is an improvement over last years report, which documented $7.6 billion in cumulative cost overruns and 20.9 years of delays.This is largely due to the fact that the SLS rocket, NASAs largest single program,graduated from development to operations with the launch of Artemis 1and is therefore no longer under the GAOs purview.

Beyond these top-level statistics, the report contained several noteworthy details on the status of the Artemis program.Three programs which are required for Americas return to the Moon on Artemis 3 were assessed by the GAO:the Orion crew capsule,the Starship lunar lander, and the AxEMU space suit.The agencys concise summaries disclosed key pieces of information which were not previously disclosed in public circles.

First and foremost, the report appeared to disclose the probable root cause for the unexpected damage to Artemis 1s heat shield.Since the middle of last year,the performance of the heat shield has been NASAs most persistent concernin the lead-up to Artemis 2, the programs first crewed mission.Orions heat shield is coated in an ablative material called Avcoat, which must contend with the unique thermal stress of a lunar reentry.When it enters Earths atmosphere, Orion will be travelling at Mach 38, with 2.3 times the kinetic energy of an equivalent capsule in low Earth orbit.

As it is heated, an ablative heat shield is supposed to slowly char, liberating microscopic flakes and gases; these products then carry thermal energy away from the spacecraft.Instead, Artemis 1s heat shield lost numerous large chunks of Avcoat in a process known as spallation.In post-flight imagery of the heat shield, released by NASAs Office of the Inspector General (OIG) last month, over 100 pits are visible [3].Since these observations did not match the Orion programs predictions about the heat shield and because a more damaging incarnation of this behavior could put the crew at risk, NASA would like to understand the root cause of the spallation before launching Artemis 2.

The heat shield anomaly investigation was conducted using the world-class arc jet facilities at NASAs Ames Research Center.The tests wrapped up last year, but as of this writing, NASA has not publicly disclosed the root cause of the spallation.According to the GAO, the Orion program plans to brief NASA leadership about their findings this month; the investigation should be closed out this summer [4].An independent review board led by former Space Shuttle Flight Director Paul Hill is concurrently verifying the NASA teams conclusions.

We would be remiss if we did not note that the investigation is still in its final stages, and that some analyses may still be underway.However, the Orion programs leaders evidently felt comfortable enough to disclose the most likely root cause of the anomaly to the GAO.According to officials, analysis indicated that the permeability of the material was lower than their models had indicated, the auditors wrote [1].Due to its broad scope, the report did not elaborate on this observation, and it did not discuss the physical mechanism which links the low permeability to the spallation.If the outermost layer of the heat shield was not sufficiently permeable to oncoming plasma, it would have led to a sharper thermal gradient across its surface, but it is unknown whether this alone could result in the observed loss of Avcoat.

The GAO confirms that NASA is investigating whether they can modify Artemis 2s reentry trajectory to reduce the magnitude of the spallation.These options were previously described in detail byArtemis 2 Pilot Victor Gloverin an interview with Ars Technicas Stephen Clark [5].As for future missions, the GAO noted, Officials said an option for Artemis III and beyond may be to modify their manufacturing process to increase and optimize the permeability in heat shield materials.

The audit also included a major clarification about the schedule for Artemis 3.Since January, NASAs leadership hasconsistently claimed that the mission will take place in September of 2026, one year after Artemis 2.SpaceX is signed up to land in September of 2026, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson told Congress on April 30th[6].While SLS, Orion, Starship, and the AxEMU must all be available prior to Artemis 3, the lander is currently expected to be the pacing item due to thecomplex series of ship-to-ship cryogenic refueling operationswhich must be conducted in orbit prior to the mission.

According to the GAO, achieving the 2026 goal is unlikely; in fact, the Human Landing System program has a different internal schedule estimate for human lunar return.In December 2023, NASA established cost and schedule baselines for the HLS Initial Capability at the 70 percent joint cost and schedule confidence level, as required by NASA policy, the report stated [1].The cost baseline is $4.9 billion, and the schedule baseline is February 2028 for the lunar orbit checkout review.Currently, there is a 17-month gap between the official Artemis 3 launch date and this internal baseline target date.

Establishing 70 percent confidence levels following a spacecrafts Preliminary Design Review is standard practice for any NASA program.For HLS, this metric essentially states that there is a 70% probability that Artemis 3 will be completed prior to February of 2028, and that there is a 30% probability that the landing will happen after this date.As one might expect, there is a large amount of uncertainty in this schedule due to the unforeseen challenges which will inevitably arise in the construction of a machine which is as complex as a crewed lunar lander.However, the 70 percent joint confidence level is still valuable, as it allows NASA to set realistic and reasonable deadlines for its workforce.For large and ambitious projects, these estimates have proven to be correct more often than they are not.In 2014, the SLS program projected that Artemis 1 would launch in November of 2018 with 70% confidence [7]; in reality, the mission flew four years later.The James Webb Space Telescopehad a baseline launch date of July 2021, and it launched in December of that year [8].

SpaceXs HLS contract hasa total value of 2.9 billion dollars.It is worth noting that this contract has a fixed price and that it did not grown as Artemis 3 was delayed beyondits aspirational 2024 launch date.Rather, the $4.9 billion also includes NASAs contributions to the development of HLS.While the agencys involvement in commercial programs is often overlooked, the development of Starship is a true partnership between SpaceX and NASA, combining the formers innovative culture and rapid iteration with the latters meticulous analysis and six decades of heritage.

According to the GAO, NASAs engineers have made substantial contributions to the Starship program.In December 2023, the program reported that SpaceX used significant NASA technical expertise to support its technology development. SpaceXs second integrated flight test incorporated NASA technology for accurately estimating propellant mass in space, according to HLS program officials. Further, the HLS program tested large propellant valves at Marshall Space Flight Center, and generated independent models to assess propellant aggregation, usage, and storage.

The report also touched on sources of uncertainty for the sustainable HLS, which will be leveraged for Artemis 4 and subsequent missions.It noted, The program found significant issues with SpaceXs supporting evidence that its mission can be achieved within schedule and acceptable risk. HLS officials noted that SpaceXs schedule lacked sufficient detail to assess progress, and, as a result, SpaceX agreed to provide more detailed schedule data for its SLD (Sustaining Lunar Development) lander.It is unclear whether these risks will also impact Artemis 3.The Starship vehicles which will land astronauts on the Moon during Artemis 3 and 4 share numerous common systems, including propellant tanks, engines, landing gear, and elevators.However, the sustainable lander may feature enhancements to its life support system, its autonomous landing software, its power storage, and other components [9], which might be driving the risks which are cited by the GAO.

Finally, the report documented an evolving issue concerning the development of the space suits which the Artemis 3 astronauts will wear on the lunar surface.The Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU) is being developed by Axiom Space under a contract with NASA.While Axiom is a young company, it is a capable organization which wasfounded by a group of former NASA engineersled by former ISS program manager Mike Suffredini.The suit is heavily based upon the Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit (xEMU), a prototype lunar space suit developed by NASA.

However, like many start-ups, Axiom is still filling out its ranks.This poses challenges for the AxEMU program.According to the GAO, Axiom is working to address workforce gaps in its specialized technical disciplines. NASA and Axiom established meetings between contractor and NASA subject matter experts to cover gaps in technical expertise. Axiom is still working to establish hiring plans for the additional personnel it needs.It is unclear if or how this will impact the development schedule for the EVA suit.

The GAO report provides unique insights into the current status of the Artemis program.It is noteworthy that many recent issues with Artemis hardware have only been disclosed thanks to government watchdogs; for instance, the first photographs of the Artemis 1 heat shield were released by the OIG in May.While it appears that astronauts will not return to the lunar surface until the final years of this decade, setbacks are to be expected.Artemis is an immensely complex national effort which requires close cooperation between multiple programs and companies, as well as novel technologies such as segmented lunar heat shields and orbital refueling.

With Artemis, NASA is trying to rebuild a foundation for the human exploration of another world which was lost with the termination of Apollo.The next few years will be critical for the program as it attempts to close its technology gaps, fly astronauts safely, and set a realistic schedule.However, to invokethe words of President John F. Kennedy, these challenges are worth facing not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win.

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GAO Discusses Orion Heat Shield Anomaly Root Cause, Artemis 3 Internal Schedule - AmericaSpace

OpenAI Scientist Ousted After Failed Coup Against Sam Altman Is Starting a New AI Company

After leaving OpenAI, founding member and former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever is starting his own firm to build

Keep It Vague

After leaving OpenAI under a dark cloud, founding member and former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever is starting his own firm to bring about "safe" artificial superintelligence.

In a post on X-formerly-Twitter, the man who orchestrated OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's temporary ouster — and who was left in limbo for six months over it before his ultimate departure last month — said that he's "starting a new company" that he calls Safe Superintelligence Inc, or SSI for short.

"We will pursue safe superintelligence in a straight shot, with one focus, one goal, and one product," Sutskever continued in a subsequent tweet. "We will do it through revolutionary breakthroughs produced by a small cracked team."

Questions abound. Did Sutskever mean a "crack team"? Or his new team "cracked" in some way? Regardless, in an interview with Bloomberg about the new venture, Sutskever elaborated somewhat but kept things familiarly vague.

"At the most basic level, safe superintelligence should have the property that it will not harm humanity at a large scale,” he told the outlet. "After this, we can say we would like it to be a force for good. We would like to be operating on top of some key values. Some of the values we were thinking about are maybe the values that have been so successful in the past few hundred years that underpin liberal democracies, like liberty, democracy, freedom."

So, you know, nothing too difficult.

AI Guys

Though not stated explicitly, that comment harkens back somewhat to the headline-grabbing Altman sacking that Sutskever led last fall.

While it remains unclear exactly why Sutskever and some of his fellow former OpenAI board members turned against Altman in last November's "turkey-shoot clusterf*ck," there was some speculation that it had to do with safety concerns about a secretive high-level AI project called Q* — pronounced "queue-star" — that Altman et al have refused to speak about. With the emphasis on "safety" in Sutskever's new venture making its way into the project's very name, it's easy to see a link between the two.

In that same Bloomberg interview, Sutskever was vague not only about his specific reasons for founding the new firm but also about how it plans to make money — though according to one of his cofounders, former Apple AI lead Daniel Gross, money is no issue.

"Out of all the problems we face," Gross told the outlet, "raising capital is not going to be one of them."

While SSI certainly isn't the only OpenAI competitor pursuing higher-level AI, its founders' resumes lend it a certain cachet — and its route to incorporation has been, it seems, paved with some lofty intentions.

More on OpenAI: It Turns Out Apple Is Only Paying OpenAI in Exposure

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OpenAI Scientist Ousted After Failed Coup Against Sam Altman Is Starting a New AI Company

Journalist Says Trump Suffered "Severe Memory Problems" During Extensive Interviews

The writer of a new Donald Trump biography said the ex-president couldn't remember him on their second meeting.

A journalist who spent hours interviewing Donald Trump for an upcoming book about "The Apprentice" said there were times when the ex-president couldn't remember him — even though they'd already met.

In multiple TV hits promoting his forthcoming book "Apprentice in Wonderland," Variety co-editor-in-chief Ramin Setoodeh told fellow reporters that Trump seemed to have some cognitive issues during his time with the former president.

Speaking to MSNBC's "Morning Joe," which is hosted by former Trump friend Joe Scarborough, Setoodeh  said that his time getting to know the former "Apprentice" host post-presidency makes his comments about President Joe Biden's own alleged cognitive issues all the more ironic.

"Trump had severe memory issues," the Variety editor said. "As the journalist who spent the most time with him, I have to say, he couldn't remember things, he couldn't even remember me."

Recalling that the second of six times he met Trump in 2021, Setoodeh said that although they'd spoken for an hour just a few months prior to their second meeting, the former president admitted that he didn't recognize him.

"He had a vacant look on his face, and I said, 'Do you remember me?'" the reporter recounted. "And he said 'no' — he had no recollection of our lengthy interview that we had, and he wasn't doing a lot of interviews at that time."

"I got to know Donald Trump post-presidency... and Trump had severe memory issues. As the journalist who spent the most time with him, he couldn't remember things, he couldn't even remember me."

@RaminSetoodeh on interviewing Trump for his book, 'Apprentice in Wonderland' pic.twitter.com/yUnxZ5K5QR

— Morning Joe (@Morning_Joe) June 17, 2024

In another interview, this time with CNN's Kaitlan Collins, Setoodeh affirmed the impressions from a recent CNBC report about CEOs who were "not impressed" by Trump's "meandering" train of thought.

"He goes from one story to the next," the reporter said. "He struggles with the chronology of events. He seems very upset that he wasn't respected by certain celebrities in the White House."

Setoodeh added that although it was never exactly easy to interview Trump, the situation seems to have gotten worse after he left the White House and relaunched his rematch with Biden.

"There were some cognitive questions about where he was and what he was thinking," the biographer said, "and he would, from time to time, become confused."

Far be it from us to offer unschooled armchair diagnoses about the mental states of people we only know via celebrity, but Setoodeh's remarks don't inspire confidence. Then again, neither are those about the person currently occupying the Oval Office, either.

More on cognition: Scientists Discover That When You Don't Sleep, You Turn Into a Bigtime Dumbass

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Toddler Trapped in Scorching Tesla When Battery Dies

A toddler was trapped inside a Tesla Model Y after the vehicle's battery died without warning — in the middle of an Arizona heat wave.

Death Trap

A 20-month-old girl was trapped inside a Tesla Model Y after the vehicle's battery died without warning — in the middle of an Arizona heat wave.

As local CBS-affiliated news station AZFamily reports, the girl's grandmother was horrified after discovering there was no way to get into the car.

"And I closed the door, went around the car, get in the front seat, and my car was dead," Renee Sanchez, who was on her way to the Phoenix Zoo with her granddaughter, told the outlet. "I could not get in. My phone key wouldn’t open it. My card key wouldn’t open it."

Sanchez called 911 and fortunately, the local Scottsdale fire department responded right away.

"And when they got here, the first thing they said was, 'Uggh, it’s a Tesla. We can’t get in these cars,'" Sanchez recalled. "And I said, 'I don’t care if you have to cut my car in half. Just get her out.'"

Locked Out

Fortunately, the girl was rescued safely by firefighters who broke a window with an axe.

Despite the happy ending, the incident highlights a glaring safety oversight. Usually, Tesla owners are alerted if the 12-volt battery that takes care of the vehicle's electrical systems is low — but Sanchez never got such a warning, something a Tesla representative reportedly confirmed to her later.

"When that battery goes, you’re dead in the water," she told AZFamily.

There's a manual latch on the driver's side that allows passengers to get out. But given the girl's young age, that wasn't an option.

We've already seen plenty of reports of people getting trapped inside Teslas, suggesting the EV maker isn't doing enough to redesign the system or educate drivers on how to access the hidden manual release.

"You don't know it's there unless you know it's there," Arizona local and Tesla owner Rick Meggison, told Phoenix's ABC15 last year after getting trapped during 100-degree heat.

As Fortune reports, the latest incident involving Sanchez's granddaughter highlights an ongoing debate. Is it up to the fire department to keep up with Tesla's emergency response guide, or is Tesla to blame for choosing "electronic door latches that don’t have proper emergency safeguards" and putting "form over function," as Center for Auto Safety executive director Michael Brooks told Fortune?

Either way, it's not like knowledge of the manual latch would've helped in this particular case.

"When there’s not a federal standard that specifies how these vehicles are to be made, Tesla very rarely chooses routes that are safe," Brooks added. "They're usually choosing something glitzy: safety comes last."

More on Tesla: Prices for Used EVs Are Cratering

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Premiere of Movie With AI-Generated Script Canceled Amid Outrage

The premier of a movie featuring an entirely AI-generated script was canceled last week due to public backlash, reports say.

London Has Spoken

The premier of a movie featuring an entirely AI-generated script was canceled last week amid public backlash, The Daily Beast reports.

Per the Beast, the not-for-profit movie, titled "The Last Screenwriter," was due to debut this weekend at London's Prince Charles Cinema. But just a few days prior to the planned event, the showing was suddenly canceled. The cinema's reason for axing it, according to director Peter Luisi? Complaints. Lots of them.

Luisi told the Beast that the theater — which reportedly received over 200 complaints in total — reached out to him on Tuesday, explaining that "overnight they had another 160 people complaining, so they had to cancel the screening."

"I was totally surprised," Luisi added. "I didn't expect that."

In short, Londoners have spoken — and it seems that enough of them aren't interested in a film that credits GPT-4 as its writer.

Strong Concern

Luisi, for his part, says that people misunderstood the film's intentions.

"I think people don't know enough about the project," the director told the Beast. "All they hear is 'first film written entirely by AI' and they immediately see the enemy, and their anger goes towards us. But I don't feel like that way at all. I feel like the film is not at all saying 'this is how movies should be.'"

The director also described the film as an exploration of the "man versus machine" trope, telling the Beast that in "all of these movies, a human imagined how this scenario would be."

His is "the first movie" in which "not the human, but the AI imagined how this would be."

Of course, it could be argued that because GPT-4 is trained on troves upon troves of human data — including humanity's creative output — whatever screenplay the AI spits it is ultimately still imagined by humans. A large language model (LLM)-powered AI, then, is simply remixing that creative labor and regurgitating a version of it.

But we digress! As AI continues its ever-faster creep into the film industry, not to mention Hollywood labor disputes and union battles, this certainly won't be the last AI-forward project that we see bubble up. A fair warning to the AI-curious filmmaker, however: as it turns out, a lot of people still want their movies created by human beings.

"The feedback we received over the last 24 hrs once we advertised the film," the Prince Charles Cinema told The Guardian in a statement, "has highlighted the strong concern held by many of our audience on the use of AI in place of a writer which speaks to a wider issue within the industry.?"

More on AI and movies: Ashton Kutcher Threatens That Soon, Ai Will Spit out Entire Movies

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New AI Snapchat Filter Transforms You in Real Time

The new generative AI tech from Snapchat aims to bring an augmented reality to your videos using your phone's hardware.

Dream Machine

Snapchat filters are about to hit another level. The popular image-based messaging app has unveiled its upcoming AI model, intended to bring a trippy, augmented reality experience to its millions of users with tech that can transform footage from their smartphone cameras into pretty much whatever they want — so long as they're okay with it looking more than a little wonky.

As shown in an announcement demo, for instance, Snapchat's new AI can transport its subjects into the world of a "50s sci-fi film" at the whim of a simple text prompt, and even updates their wardrobes to fit in.

In practice, the results look more like a jerky piece of stop motion than anything approaching a seamless video. But arguably, the real achievement here is that not only is this being rendered in real-time, but that it's being generated on the smartphones themselves, rather than on a remote cloud server.

Snapchat considers these real-time, local generative AI capabilities a "milestone," and says they were made possible by its team's "breakthroughs to optimize faster, more performant GenAI techniques."

The app makers could be onto something: getting power-hungry AI models to run on small, popular devices is something that tech companies have been scrambling to achieve — and there's perhaps no better way to endear people to this lucrative new possibility than by using it to make them look cooler.

Lens Lab

Snapchat has been trying out AI features for at least a year now. In a rocky start, it released a chatbot called "My AI" last April, which pretty much immediately pissed off most of its users. Undeterred, it's since released the option to send entirely AI-generated snaps for paid users, and also released a feature for AI-generated selfies called "Dreams."

Taking those capabilities and applying them to video is a logical but steep progression, and doing it in real-time is even more of a bold leap. But the results are currently less impressive than what's possible with still images, which is unsurprising. Coherent video generation is something that AI models continue to struggle with, even without time constraints.

There's a lot of experimenting to be done, and Snapchat wants users to be part of the process. It will be releasing a new version of its Lens Studio that let creators make AR Lenses — essentially filters — and even build their own, tailor-made AI models to 'supercharge' AR creation.

Regular users, meanwhile, will get a taste of these AI-powered AR features through Lenses in the coming months, according to TechCrunch. So prepare for a bunch of really, really weird videos — and perhaps a surge in what's possible with generative AI on your smartphones.

More on AI: OpenAI Imprisons AI That Was Running for Mayor in Washington

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Scientists Invent Smartphone Chip That Peers Through Barriers With Electromagnetic Waves

A group of scientists have created a chip that can fit into smartphone and

For more than 15 years, a group of scientists in Texas have been hard at work creating smaller and smaller devices to "see" through barriers using medium-frequency electromagnetic waves — and now, they seem closer than ever to cracking the code.

In an interview with Futurism, electrical engineering professor Kenneth O of the University of Texas explained that the tiny new imager chip he made with the help of his research team, which can detect the outlines of items through barriers like cardboard, was the result of repeat advances and breakthroughs in microprocessor technology over the better half of the last two decades.

"This is actually similar technology as what they're using at the airport for security inspection," O told us.

The chip is similar to the large screening devices that we've all had to walk through at airport gates for the past 15 years or so — though those operate at much lower frequents than this device, which uses electromagnetic frequencies between microwave and infrared, which are invisible to the eye and "considered safe for humans," per the university's press release 

As a nod to his colleagues in the electrical engineering field, O credited "the whole community" for its "phenomenal progress" in improving the underlying technology behind the imager chip — though of course, it was his team that "happen[ed] to be the first to put it all together."

As New Atlas recently explained, the chip is powered by complementary metal-oxide semiconductors (CMOS), an affordable technology used in computer processing and memory chips. While CMOS tech is often used in tandem with lenses to power smartphone cameras, in this case the researchers are using it to detect objects without actually seeing them.

"This technology is like Superman’s X-ray vision," enthused O in the university's press release about the imager. "Of course, we use signals at 200 gigahertz to 400 gigahertz instead of X-rays, which can be harmful."

Indeed, the Man of Steel came up multiple times in our discussion with the electrical engineer, who indicated that safety was priority number one when it came to developing this still-experimental technology.

For instance, as New Atlas noted, the chip's wave-reading capabilities have been deliberately curtailed so that it can only detect objects through barriers from a few centimeters away, assuaging concerns that a thief might try to use it to look through someone's bags or packages.

When we asked O whether the imager had been tested on anything living, or perhaps even human skin, he said that it had not — but that's mostly because the water content in human skin tissues would absorb the terahertz waves it uses. This comes as something of a relief, given that the idea of someone using their smartphone to look at your bones or organs without your knowledge is pretty terrifying.

And speaking of security, the engineer iterated that rather than seeking swift commercialization, keeping the imager chip's capabilities as hemmed in as possible to make sure it's not used for nefarious purposes is far more important — though he acknowledges it's impossible to entirely prevent inventive bad actors from figuring out their own versions.

"Trying to make technologies so that people do not use it in unintended ways, it's a very important aspect of developing technologies," O told Futurism. "At the end, you have to do your best. But if somebody really wants to do something... yeah, it's really hard to prevent."

While it's good news that this imager technology is, for now, limited to seeing through boxes and more insubstantial mediums like dust or smoke, the researcher said that it should be able to see through walls too — though, admittedly, he and his team haven't tried to yet.

More on wave-reading: The Earth May Be Swimming Through Dark Matter, Scientists Say

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Scientists Accused of Ignoring Gay Animals

Scientists have long observed animals having gay sex — but those observations have rarely made their way into academic papers.

Kingdom Come

Scientists have long observed animals engaging in same-sex behavior — but for complex reasons, those observations have rarely made their way into academic literature.

In a new paper in the journal PLOS One, anthropology researchers at the University of Toronto spoke to 65 experts about the frequency of observed homosexual animal behavior in the animal kingdom and their experiences documenting it.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, there was a gigantic gulf: 77 percent had observed same-sex animal behavior, but only 48 percent collected data on it and just 19 percent ended up publishing their findings.

Though none of the survey respondents themselves reported any "discomfort or sociopolitical concerns" of their own, many said that journals were biased against publishing anecdotal evidence of these same-sex animal couplings and preferred instead to rely on systematic findings. That trend is compounded by the fact that many countries have anti-gay laws on the books.

"Researchers working in countries where homosexuality is criminalized may be less likely to, or unable to, publish papers on this topic if they wish to maintain good working relationships in that region," the paper reads. "The political or social values of the institutions where researchers work may pose a barrier to their ability to publish on this topic."

It's Natural

The effect of this apparent bias is clear: despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, same-sex animal behavior has been considered "unnatural," or rare with key exceptions like penguins and Japanese macaques, which are both known for their homosexuality.

According to Karyn Anderson, a Toronto anthropology grad student and the paper's first author, this erroneous belief seems to extend to humans, too.

"I think that record should be corrected," Anderson told The Guardian. "One thing I think we can say for certain is that same-sex sexual behavior is widespread and natural in the animal kingdom."

While the PLOS One paper looks at a relatively narrow cohort as exemplary of this seeming trend, other experts also suggest the lack of academic acknowledgment of near-universal animal homosexuality is bizarre.

"Around 1,500 species have been observed showing homosexual [behaviors], but this is certainly an underestimate because it’s seen in almost every branch of the evolutionary tree — spiders, squids, monkeys," recounted Josh Davis, who works at London's Natural History Museum and wrote a book titled "A Little Gay Natural History."

"There’s a growing suggestion it’s normal and natural to almost every species," Davis, who was not involved in the research, told The Guardian. "It’s probably more rare to be a purely heterosexual species."

Be that as it may, there remain clear barriers to getting this well-observed reality into the mainstream — but hopefully, that tide will soon turn.

More on animal behavior: Orcas Strike Again, Sinking Yacht as Oil Tanker Called for Rescue

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Scientists Reverse Alzheimer’s Synapse Damage in Mice

Scientists in Japan reversed the signs of Alzheimer’s in lab mice by restoring the healthy function of neuron synapses in their brains.

Scientists in Japan say they have reversed the signs of Alzheimer’s disease in lab mice by restoring the healthy function of synapses, critical parts of neurons that shoot chemical messages to other neurons.

The secret was developing a synthetic peptide, a small package of amino acids — a mini-protein, if you will — and injecting it up the nostrils of the mice, in an experiment they detailed in a study published in the journal Brain Research.

Needless to say, mice are very different from humans. But if the treatment successfully survives the gauntlet of clinical studies with human participants, it could potentially lead to a new treatment for Alzheimer’s disease, a tragic degenerative condition that burdens tens of millions of people around the world.

"We strongly hope that our peptide could go through the tests and reach AD (Alzheimer’s disease) patients without much delay and rescue their cognitive symptoms, which is the primary concern of patients and their families," Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology neuroscience professor and the study's principal investigator Tomoyuki Takahashi said in a statement.

For the study, researchers focused on how the protein tau disrupts the chemical communication between neurons.

In Alzheimer’s disease, tau accumulates in the brain and interferes with the normal processes within synapses by using up a type of enzyme called dynamin, a key component in healthy neuron synaptic function.

Injection of the peptide seems to prevent this interaction with dynamin, which then leads to the reversal of Alzheimer’s disease symptoms in mice and restores their cognitive function, as long as they're treated early.

Members of the research team seem very optimistic that the study could be translated into a viable medication that could treat this devastating disease, but acknowledge that it's going to take a long time.

Going from experiments with mice to clinical trials and then finally into a drug that's commercially available can take decades.

"The coronavirus vaccine showed us that treatments can be rapidly developed, without sacrificing scientific rigor or safety," said Chia-Jung Chang, Okinawa Institute research scientist and the study's first author, in a statement. "We don’t expect this to go as quickly, but we know that governments — especially in Japan — want to address Alzheimer’s disease, which is affecting so many people. And now, we have learned that it is possible to effectively reverse cognitive decline if treated at an early stage."

If it's too late for our grandparents and parents, that's terrible. But perhaps this treatment will be ready in time for us.

More on Alzheimer's disease: Weird Particle Floating Through Air May Cause Alzheimer’s

The post Scientists Reverse Alzheimer's Synapse Damage in Mice appeared first on Futurism.

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Scientists Reverse Alzheimer's Synapse Damage in Mice

Oops! Geoengineering Trick to Cool Brutal Heat Could Spike Temperature Elsewhere, Scientists Say

Researchers are warning that geoengineering efforts to help cool temperatures in California could trigger heatwaves in Europe.

Brighter Clouds Ahead

Researchers are warning that geoengineering efforts to help cool temperatures in California could trigger heatwaves in Europe, a "scary" implication given the sheer lack of regulation controlling such measures across the globe.

As The Guardian reports, scientists have suggested spraying aerosols into clouds over the ocean to cool down the surface below, a practice called "marine cloud brightening." As the name suggests, the idea is to brighten clouds to make them reflect more of the Sun's radiation back into space.

Last month, a team of University of Washington researchers attempted to do just that in the San Francisco Bay using a machine that sprays tiny sea-salt particles, amid criticism from environmentalists. The experiment was later shut down by city officials, citing health concerns.

Now, as detailed in a study published in the journal Nature Climate Change today, it turns out the practice could have unintended consequences. While under present-day conditions it may reduce heat exposure significantly, the "same interventions under mid-century warming minimally reduce or even increase heat stress in the Western United States and across the world."

In other words, while it may work now, given worsening conditions, that equation may flip on its head by the year 2050, highlighting the potential risks of geoengineering.

"It shows that marine cloud brightening can be very effective for the US West Coast if done now, but it may be ineffective there in the future and could cause heatwaves in Europe, " team lead and UC San Diego oceanographer Jessica Wan told The Guardian.

Darker Skies

The team examined computer models of the climate in 2010 and 2050. They simulated geoengineering operations in the north-eastern Pacific and near Alaska, but found that "teleconnections," which link climate systems in disparate parts of the world, may actually make the situation worse instead of better by the latter half of the century.

While heat exposure could be dropped by 55 percent under current conditions near Alaska, results would be diminished considerably by 2050 due to fewer clouds and higher base temperatures. In California, however, geoengineering could actually trigger temperatures to climb — not fall — in other parts of the world.

That's because the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a prominent surface-to-deep current that circulates water within the Atlantic and can affect atmospheric weather, could be slowed down.

The researchers are hoping to highlight the glaring lack of international regulation controlling geoengineering efforts.

"There is really no solar geoengineering governance right now," Wan told The Guardian. "That is scary. Science and policy need to be developed together."

More on geoengineering: Scientists Working on Desperate Plan to Refreeze Arctic

The post Oops! Geoengineering Trick to Cool Brutal Heat Could Spike Temperature Elsewhere, Scientists Say appeared first on Futurism.

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Oops! Geoengineering Trick to Cool Brutal Heat Could Spike Temperature Elsewhere, Scientists Say

Something Strange Appears to Be Powering "Immortal" Stars at the Center of Our Galaxy

Stars at the Milky Way's center stay young forever, scientists claim, by feeding off dark matter particles that are abundant there.

Eternal Flame

The swirling vortex center of the Milky Way is a weird place, with a supermassive black hole that vacuums up interstellar matter and supernovae torpedoing hapless stars to the edges of our galaxy.

Add another strange thing about our galaxy's nucleus, according to new research: stars that stay young indefinitely by feeding off dark matter particles, akin to continuously shooting lighter fluid into a flaming BBQ grill.

A team of scientists from Stanford and Stockholm University posed this possible scenario on why certain stars in the Milky Way's center are improbably young by using computer simulations and factoring in the presence of copious dark matter in the galactic nucleus, as detailed in a new, yet-to-be-peer-reviewed paper they posted online where it was spotted by Live Science.

The researchers were drawn to the strange fact that stars near our galaxy's black hole appear to be very young — and yet they live in a neighborhood not friendly to the formation of baby stars and have "spectroscopic features of more evolved stars," the paper reads.

The scientists' conclusion? That a strange force is keeping these stars "immortal," in the paper's choice of phrasing.

Forever Young

Other researchers have differing theories on why there are so many young stars at the center of the Milky Way. One theory is that the stars were pushed into the vicinity of the nucleus, and this journey sparked the formation of these baby stars.

But Isabelle John, a doctoral student in astroparticle physics at Stockholm University and the new study's lead author, told Live Science that she and fellow researchers wanted to see if dark matter was a factor in this strange phenomenon.

They ran computer simulations, which strongly suggested that these stars may be older than they appear — and maintain their vibrant glow by feeding on surrounding dark matter.

These stars capture dark matter particles with their gravitational pull, the theory goes, and the particles smash against each other and release powerful bursts of energy inside the stars.

This energy works like interstellar botox, keeping these stars in a suspended state of youth — essentially staying "immortal" — even when they run out of internal fuel for nuclear fusion.

"Stars burn hydrogen in nuclear fusion," John told Live Science. "The outward pressure from this balances out the inward pressure from the gravitational forces, and keeps the stars in a stable equilibrium."

Advanced new telescopes may be able to confirm these computer simulations, the researchers say — shedding fascinating new light on at least one mystery at the heart of our galaxy.

More on dark matter: The Earth May Be Swimming Through Dark Matter, Scientists Say

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Something Strange Appears to Be Powering "Immortal" Stars at the Center of Our Galaxy

Researcher Discovers Terrifying Apple Vision Pro Hack That Can Fill Your Entire Home Office With Fearsome Spiders

A researcher claims to have found the

A cybersecurity researcher and bug hunter named Ryan Pickren claims to have found the "world's first spatial computing hack," allowing malicious actors to fill the offices of their Apple Vision Pro headset-wearing victims with creepy-crawling spiders.

"I found a bug in visionOS Safari that allows a malicious website to bypass all warnings and forcefully fill your room with an arbitrary number of animated 3D objects," Pickren wrote in a blog post. "These objects persist in your space even after you exit Safari."

Fortunately for Vision Pro users, Pickren reported the bug to Apple back in February, and the company fixed it in June, as official documentation on the company's website shows.

Nonetheless, it shows that malicious actors could've easily exploited the browser baked into the headset's VisionOS operating system and sent their victims a wild surprise.

"If the victim just views our website in Vision Pro, we can instantly fill their room with hundreds of crawling spiders and screeching bats!" Pickren wrote. "Freaky stuff."

Pickren came up with a short exploit code that could send animated files through a simple website to the headset without the wearer ever knowing.

"It turns out it was surprisingly easy to find a loophole in the visionOS Spatial Computing permissions model," Pickren wrote.

"This issue was introduced when an old iOS feature was ported to visionOS via the latest WebKit build," Pickren told Futurism in an email, referring to the engine that powers Apple's Safari browser. "The bug doesn’t really exist in iOS, it’s the intersection of the new spatial computing platform and the old feature that creates the privacy/security violation."

The news comes after other hackers found similar exploits that also affect Apple's WebKit. Just one day after the release of reviews for the Vision Pro, Apple released a security patch, citing a vulnerability that "may have been exploited" by hackers already.

A PhD student at MIT also claimed to have hacked the headset in February, with a "kernel exploit" that caused it to crash and reboot.

The latest hack, however, is far more fear-inducing than that. Pickren shared several videos showing spiders "literally crawling out of my malicious website," and spreading out across his desk.

Another clip shows "hundreds of screeching bats" filling his office and circling his head.

Worse yet, to exterminate the unwanted visitors, users would have to manually run "around the room to physically tap each one" as simply "closing Safari does not get rid of them."

It's an equal parts hilarious and terrifying hack that highlights some glaring oversights when it comes to a $3,500 device that takes up your entire field of vision.

However, Pickren has an idea about why the bug flew under the radar until now.

"I think triaging bug reports is really hard and rigid vulnerability classification taxonomies don’t always work," Pickren told Futurism. "You won’t find 'the issue fills the victim’s room full of spiders' in the [Common Vulnerability Scoring System] framework, which understandably makes it difficult for security analysts to quickly classify nuanced issues that exclusively impact entirely new computing platforms."

As for the future of the headset itself, The Information reported this week that Apple is giving up on a next-gen device and is focusing on a cheaper, less ambitious version instead. The tech giant has been struggling with sluggish sales and a drop in interest.

Complicating matters, the company still has plenty of bugs to squash.

"I hope Apple uses this report as an opportunity to more holistically evaluate impact and protect the customer experience," Pickren told Futurism. "I look forward to working with Apple again in the future."

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Researcher Discovers Terrifying Apple Vision Pro Hack That Can Fill Your Entire Home Office With Fearsome Spiders

Asked to Summarize a Webpage, Perplexity Instead Invented a Story About a Girl Who Follows a Trail of Glowing Mushrooms in a Magical Forest

When Wired asked Perplexity's chatbot to summarize a test webpage that only contained one sentence, it came up with a perplexing answer.

Perplexity, an AI startup that has raised hundreds of millions of dollars from the likes of Jeff Bezos, is struggling with the fundamentals of the technology.

Its AI-powered search engine, developed to rival the likes of Google, still has a strong tendency to come up with fantastical lies drawn from seemingly nowhere.

The most incredible example yet might come from a Wired investigation into the company's product. When Wired asked it to summarize a test webpage that only contained the sentence, "I am a reporter with Wired," it came up with a perplexing answer: a "story about a young girl named Amelia who follows a trail of glowing mushrooms in a magical forest called Whisper Woods."

In fact, as Wired's logs showed, the search engine never even attempted to visit the page, despite Perplexity's assurances that its chatbot "searches the internet to give you an accessible, conversational, and verifiable answer."

The bizarre tale of Amelia in the magical forest perfectly illustrates a glaring discrepancy between the lofty promises Perplexity and its competitors make and what its chatbots are actually capable of in the real world.

A lot has been said about the ongoing hype surrounding AI, with investors pouring billions of dollars into the tech. But despite an astronomical amount of available funds, companies like Perplexity — nevermind much larger brethren like OpenAI, Microsoft and Google— are consistently stumbling.

For quite some time now, we've watched chatbots come up with confidently-told lies, which AI boosters optimistically call "hallucinations" — a convenient way to avoid the word "bullshit," in the estimation of Wired and certain AI researchers.

Meanwhile, Silicon Valley executives are becoming increasingly open to the possibility that the tech may never get to the point of never making crap up. Some experts concur.

It's particularly strange in the case of Perplexity, which was once held up as an exciting new startup that could provide a new business model for publishers still reeling from a flood of AI products that are ripping off their work.

But the company's chatbot has not held up to virtually any degree of scrutiny, with the Associated Press finding that it invented fake quotes from real people.

Worse yet, Forbes caught the tool selling off its reporting with barely any attribution, culminating in general counsel MariaRosa Cartolano accusing Perplexity of "willful infringement" in a letter obtained by Axios.

Should we take these companies by their word and believe that more trustworthy chatbots are around the corner — or should investors be prepared for the AI bubble to burst?

It's a strange state of affairs. Currently, these companies seem to be in the business of selling hopes and dreams for the future — not concrete products that actually work now.

More on Perplexity: There's Something Deeply Wrong With Perplexity

The post Asked to Summarize a Webpage, Perplexity Instead Invented a Story About a Girl Who Follows a Trail of Glowing Mushrooms in a Magical Forest appeared first on Futurism.

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Asked to Summarize a Webpage, Perplexity Instead Invented a Story About a Girl Who Follows a Trail of Glowing Mushrooms in a Magical Forest

Nanosized Blocks Spontaneously Assemble in Water To Create Tiny Floating Checkerboards – University of California San Diego

The self-assembly process is driven by the surface chemistry of the nanocubes. A high density of hydrophobic molecules on the surface brings the cubes together to minimize their interaction with water. Meanwhile, the long chains of hydrophilic molecules cause enough repulsion to create voids between the cubes, creating the checkerboard pattern.

To fabricate the structure, researchers applied drops of the nanocube suspension onto a petri dish containing water. The resulting checkerboard can be easily transferred to a substrate by dipping the substrate into the water and slowly withdrawing it, allowing the nanostructure to coat it.

This study stems from a collaborative effort between multiple research groups that are part of the UC San Diego Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC). The work featured a synergistic combination of computational and experimental techniques. Weve built a continuous feedback loop between our computations and experiments, said Tao. We used computer simulations to help us design the materials at the nanoscale and predict how they will behave. We also used our experimental results in the lab to validate the simulations, fine tune them and build a better model.

In designing the material, researchers chose silver crystal nanocubes due to the Tao labs expertise in their synthesis. Determining the optimal surface chemistry required extensive computational experimentation, which was led by Gaurav Arya, a professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science at Duke University and co-senior author of the study. The simulations identified the best molecules to attach to the nanocubes and predicted how the cubes would interact and assemble on the water surface. The simulations were iteratively refined using experimental data obtained by Taos lab. Electron microscopy performed by the lab of study co-author Alex Fra, a professor in the Department of Physics at UC San Diego, confirmed the formation of the desired checkerboard structures.

Tao envisions applications for the nanocube checkerboard in optical sensing. Such a nanostructure can manipulate light in interesting ways, she explained. The spaces between the cubes, particularly near the corner edges where the cubes connect, can act as tiny hotspots that focus or trap light. That could be useful for making new types of optical elements like nanoscale filters or waveguides.

The researchers plan to explore the optical properties of the checkerboard in future studies.

Paper: Self-assembly of nanocrystal checkerboard patterns via non-specific interactions. Co-authors include Yufei Wang*, Rourav Basak, Yu Xie, Dong Le, Alexander D. Fuqua, Wade Shipley and Zachary Yam, UC San Diego; and Yilong Zhou* and Quanpeng Yang, Duke University.

*These authors contributed equally.

This work was supported by the National Science Foundation, UC San Diego Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (DMR-2011924). The work was performed in part at the San Diego Nanotechnology Infrastructure (SDNI) at UC San Diego, a member of the National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure,which is supported by the National Science Foundation (grant ECCS-2025752).

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Nanosized Blocks Spontaneously Assemble in Water To Create Tiny Floating Checkerboards - University of California San Diego

Wearable multichannel-active pressurized pulse sensing platform | Microsystems & Nanoengineering – Nature.com

Device fabrication and structural characterization

In TCM pulse diagnosis, it is believed that the health of human organs is related to the pressure pulse wave at corresponding mapping points (Cun, Guan, Chi) on the radial artery (Fig. 1a). In this study, we propose a wearable, flexible wristband that can be actively pressurized to mimic TCM pulse collection (Fig. 1b). The system comprises flexible pressure sensing units for collecting pulse waves at the Cun, Guan, Chi positions, an active pressure control unit providing different pressures, a wireless transmission unit for signal transmission and processing, a wireless charging unit for system power supply, and a power management unit.

a Method of TCM pulse diagnosis. b Optical image of the wireless wristband worn on the users wrist joint. c Block functional diagram of the sensing system, including the power supply, signal acquisition, processing, communication, and user interface. d Schematic illustration of the wireless wristband worn on the wrist, where the airbag provides backpressure to effectively collect pulse wave changes under different pressures. e Detailed diagram of the overall structural design of the sensor system. f Detailed diagram of the overall structural design of the pressure sensor. g, h, and i Digital optical image and FEA results of the wristband, flexible circuit and sensing array under mechanical deformation

The active pressure control unit, comprising silicone airbags, piezoelectric micropumps, a digital pressure sensor, electromagnetic valves, and one-way valves, works synergistically to provide precise pressure modulation. The micropump regulates airbag inflation, and pressure sensors and electromagnetic valves provide pressure feedback control (Fig. 1c, d). The hardware and software architecture of the system, including sensor integration, data processing modules, and user interface components, is comprehensively depicted in Fig. 1c. All components, such as the sensor array, micro-airbag array, micropump, and flexible printed circuit board (FPCB) and their interconnections, are encapsulated in soft silicone to create a fully flexible, wearable, multichannel active pressure pulse-sensing platform (WAPPP). This design allows the device to flex and stretch, ensuring tight and soft contact between the sensors and the arterial regions of the skin (Fig. 1d).

Figure 1e shows the hardware and software architecture of the system, including sensor integration, data processing modules, and user interface components. As shown in Fig. 1f, a 3-channel pulse sensor array was used to simulate three fingers for pulse wave acquisition. The overall structure of the pressure sensor includes three independent circular interdigital electrode resistance sensors, each with a diameter of 8mm, which is slightly larger than the fingertip area of the human finger (Fig. S1). The three sensor units are connected by serpentine wires, significantly improving the deformability of the device and preventing mechanical interference between adjacent units. The pressurization of micro airbags ensures close contact between the sensor unit and the skin, enabling the precise conversion of local skin deformations caused by arterial expansion/contraction into electrical signal output. Figure 1g and h show that the system and its built-in flexible circuit board have excellent bending performance and can maintain good flexibility and equipment integration despite deformation. A flexible sensor array is easy to bend and mechanically stable. Figure 1i shows a digital optical image of the pressure sensor array and corresponding finite element analysis (FEA), demonstrating its applicability for wrist pulse measurements.

As a key part of pulse sensing systems, flexible pressure sensing arrays have high requirements for sensor performance. Resistance-type pressure sensors based on interdigital electrodes have advantages such as high sensitivity, high accuracy, high stability, convenient data collection, and simple device structures. In this paper, we used an interdigital electrode with a polyimide film (PI) substrate manufactured by FPCB technology as the induction electrode and thermoplastic polyether polyurethane (TPU)-ionic liquid (ILD)-h-BN as the ionic membrane.

The sandwich structure is combined through bonding layers and a hot-pressing process to form an iontronic pressure sensor. The sensitive layer of the sensor was manufactured using screen printing, a process that is controllable in batches, as depicted in Figs. 2a and S2. After heat curing (Fig. 2a), the sensitive layer was endowed with microcolumnar microstructures via laser engraving (illustrated in Fig. 2a). The surface morphology of this layer is presented in microphotographs (Fig. 2b), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) maps (Fig. 2c), and laser scanning confocal microscopy (LSCM) images (Fig. 2d). These microcolumnar structures substantially enhance the deformation capability of the sensitive layer under compression, thereby significantly improving its sensitivity. Figure 2e shows the corresponding equivalent circuit, which indicates that the main variation in resistance within the circuit is due to the internal resistance (Rin).

a Fabrication process of the pressure sensor. b Optical image of the sensitive layer with microstructure. c Illustration and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of the sensitive layer. d Sense LSCM image. e Schematic illustration and sensing mechanism of the pulse pressure sensor. f Current variation in sensors prepared with different ionic liquid contents. g Current variation in sensors prepared by different laser etching times

The doping of h-BN in the sensitive layer increased the viscosity of the printing paste and significantly improved the conductivity variation of the sensitive layer during deformation through the ion pump effect27. To explore the optimal performance of the sensor, we investigated the effect of different laser irradiation times (0, 1, 2, and 3) and various ionic concentrations (1, 1.2, 1.5 and 2mL) on the sensor sensitivity. The results showed that the best performance for the sensitive layer was achieved with 1.5mL of ionic liquid and 2 laser engravings. This was selected as the final sensor fabrication parameter (Fig. 2f, g).

To provide further evidence of the performance of the sensor, we conducted a series of tests and measurements to characterize its electrical performance (Fig. S7). The pressure sensor exhibits high sensitivity and good linearity within the pressure range of 050kPa. As a crucial parameter for sensors, sensitivity is defined as S=(I/I0)/P. Here, I0 and I represent the initial current under a 1V voltage before loading and the change in the output current when pressure is applied, respectively. Figure 3a shows that the sensitivity of the pressure sensor is S=460.1kPa1, and the fitting coefficient is R2>0.999. It is noteworthy that the performance of this sensor surpasses that of most reported pressure sensors, enabling its suitability for testing scenarios such as human pulses and BP. We tested a series of continuous pressures to evaluate the sensors performance in this context. The sensor exhibits excellent consistency and mechanical robustness in the pressure sensing range of 050kPa, making it highly effective for real-world applications and enhancing its practical applicability (Fig. 3b). Figure 3c shows that the pressure sensor response time and recovery time are 25 and 30ms, respectively, which meet the requirements for pulse monitoring applications. To demonstrate the good resolution of the sensor, we characterized the limit of detection (LOD) of the sensor, which produces a response of ~0.035A at a pressure of 150Pa, further verifying that the LOD of the sensor is approximately 150Pa (Fig. 3d). Furthermore, the sensor demonstrated high stability and durability in long-term (12,000 cycles) pressure loadingunloading cycles at 40kPa (Fig. 3e).

a Current variation versus pressure change of the pressure sensor. b Current variation of the pressure sensor under various pressures. c Fast response of the pressure sensor. d LOD of the sensor. e Long-term cycling ability of the sensor at 40kPa for 12,000 cycles

The active pressurization device comprises a micropump (19mm21mm3.6mm, Fig. S4), a soft silicone (Ecoflex) airbag array and a one-way valve. Under pressure from the airbag array, the sensor array can detect mechanical pulses caused by the propagation of blood (Fig. 4a). Figure 4b shows the fabrication process of the micro airbag array. The piezoelectric micropump (Murata Machinery) controls the internal pressure of the silicone airbag and provides a controllable back pressure to the sensor array through conformal contact. FEA showed that the protruding displacement of the airbag surface was 2.223mm when the pressure inside the airbag was 40kPa, demonstrating the feasibility of using microairbags for the pressurized detection of pulse signals (Fig. 4c). The micropump supplies sufficient pressure (up to 50kPa) to the airbag array, enabling steady pressure support for the sensor array (Supplemental Movie 1). The one-way valve at the outlet of the micropump serves as a pressure regulator to maintain pressure within the airbag while acting as a damping valve to stabilize the active pressure adaptive system. Figure 4d shows that the pressure in the airbag is basically unchanged when the air pump is used to inflate it to 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50kPa at specific time intervals.

a Digital optical image of the sensor patch on skin. b Fabrication process of the airbag. c Optical image of the airbag and stressstrain simulation at 40kPa. d The pressure inside the airbag is maintained within a stable range of 050kPa. e and f With increasing pressure (525kPa), the pulse amplitude and corresponding FFT results change

During actual pulse acquisition, with increasing external pressure, the coupling degree between the sensor and blood vessel changes. The amplitude of the pulse wave gradually increases and then decreases, as confirmed by the FFT results, which also demonstrate corresponding changes in frequency components with variations in the amplitude of the pulse wave (Fig. 4e).

The device can wirelessly connect to a compatible smartphone app via Bluetooth, enabling the transmission of pressure sensor signals to the mobile device for data storage and analysis (Fig. 5a and Supplement Movie 2). The WAPPP is based on controllable active airbag pressurization, which allows for the control of the sensors press depth, enabling the collection of pulse waves at different static pressures. The test results indicate that as the pressing force and depth increase, the amplitude of the pulse wave gradually increases, followed by a decrease (Fig. 5b), which is consistent with the theory of pulse diagnosis in TCM.

a The display interface for mobile devices. b Pulse wave changes under 9 different static pressures. c BP prediction model. d BlandAltman plots to validate the accuracy of the pulse sensing system for SBP and DBP

To validate the systems applicability, we integrated a pulse wave test with a machine learning model and constructed a blood pressure prediction model based on a back-propagation neural network. This allows for accurate monitoring of blood pressure and cardiac status using the applied pressure and its corresponding pulse wave magnitude as input variables, inspired by the principle of blood pressure measurement. The back-propagation neural network was chosen for its flexible network structure and excellent nonlinear expression capabilities and is widely employed in BP prediction. In this study, we extracted pulse waveforms at nine pressure stages. After stabilizing the waveforms, we recorded the pulse amplitude values from the sensor and their corresponding airbag pressure values as inputs.

As illustrated in Fig. 5c, our approach utilizes a three-layer network structure comprising an input layer, a hidden layer, and an output layer. During model training, a single hidden layer is sufficient to fit high-precision functions. Using too many hidden layers can lead to overfitting and slow down the training process. The output layer consists of 2 nodes representing systolic and diastolic pressures. The pulse dataset is divided into three sets: training group, validation group, and testing group, with proportions of 70%, 15%, and 15%, respectively.

In the model training phase, as the back-propagation neural network receives data, it performs computations from the input layer through the hidden layer to the output layer, generating BP predictions. Through the adjustment of model parameters and correction with actual BP values, the corrected values are fed back into the input layer, enhancing the accuracy of the BP predictions. The results indicate a strong correlation (R-square value close to 0.99) between the output of the transfer function and that of commercial BP monitors (Fig. S5). Clinical validation of BP prediction was conducted using a test set of 21 BP data points. The average differences between our device and commercial BP monitors were 0.779.0mmHg for systolic blood pressure (SBP) and 3.229.72mmHg for diastolic blood pressure (DBP) (Fig. 5e, f). These BP prediction results met the American Association of Medical Instruments (AAMI) international criteria for BP testing.

By wearing the system on the users body, continuous and accurate monitoring of pulse variations can be achieved, allowing for the prediction of blood pressure. These results highlight the potential applications of the pulse acquisition system.

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Wearable multichannel-active pressurized pulse sensing platform | Microsystems & Nanoengineering - Nature.com

Bawumia handed ‘steer’ as Akufo-Addo jets off to Bahamas, Switzerland – GhanaWeb

Vice President Bawumia will be acting president in the stead of President Akufo-Addo

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has embarked on a five-day working visit to the Bahamas and Switzerland.

He has, therefore, formally handed over the running of the country to Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia, as required by law.

In a letter dated June 10, 2024, addressed to the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, the President informed the legislature that he would be travelling to Nassau, Bahamas, on Tuesday, June 11, 2024, upon the invitation of the Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of the Bahamas, Hon. Philip E. David KC MP, and Professor Benedict Rama, President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Afro-Exim Bank, to participate in the 31st meeting of the bank scheduled for June 12 to 13, 2024.

"I will depart Nassau on Friday, June 14, 2024, for Switzerland at the invitation of the President of the Swiss Confederation, His Excellency Violo Amherd, to participate in the Summit on Peace in Ukraine from June 15 to 16, 2024," the letter further stated.

The President mentioned that while he is scheduled to return to Ghana on June 16, Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, in accordance with Article 60(8) of the 1992 Constitution, will act as President of the country.

"I will then return to Accra on June 16, 2024. During my absence, the Vice President, Alhaji Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, in accordance with Article 60(8) of the Constitution, shall act in my stead," the letter from the presidency clarified.

The Vice President, who is the flagbearer of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) for the 2024 general elections, is currently on a campaign tour of the country.

Dr. Bawumia kicked off his campaign on Monday in the Ashanti Region, where he met with chiefs, party executives, and some youth to promote his campaign message.

Article 60(8) of Ghana's 1992 Constitution stipulates that "whenever the President is absent from Ghana or is for any other reason unable to perform the functions of his office, the Vice-President shall perform the functions of the President until the President returns or is able to perform his functions."

GA/SARA

Watch the latest episode of Everyday People on GhanaWeb TV below:

Ghanas leading digital news platform, GhanaWeb, in conjunction with the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, is embarking on an aggressive campaign which is geared towards ensuring that parliament passes comprehensive legislation to guide organ harvesting, organ donation, and organ transplantation in the country.

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Bawumia handed 'steer' as Akufo-Addo jets off to Bahamas, Switzerland - GhanaWeb

Youngest team ever will make cystic fibrosis crossing from Bahamas to Lake Worth Beach – WPTV News Channel 5 West Palm

LAKE WORTH BEACH, Fla. Playing in the waves and bonding for a cause as 200 paddlers journey from Bimini to Lake Worth Beach. Celebrating Crossing For Cystic Fibrosis, is an event that truly makes us proud to call this place home. The Crossing supports the families of those suffering from cystic fibrosis.

This morning, I met up with Piper's Angels on Lake Worth Beach, right next to Benny's on the Beach. They are planning their annual trip on June 23 at 12:01 a.m. from Bimini, Bahamas to Lake Worth Beach, Florida.

"My daughter Piper has cystic fibrosis and it's been something that our family has worked through this adversity together," said Travis Suit, founder of Piper's Angels. "So, seeing the community come together and fundraise to be able to support more CF families is just an amazing cause."

The youngest team ever is also crossing hoping to raise $8,000. They are a group, including seniors, from the Benjamin School.

"My personal motive is kind of like it's like our friends. We want to do it and do a great job," said Sam from the Benjamin School. "So, our first year. We're the youngest team and we're really looking forward to that."

What's it like making a crossing that long? I asked Lindsay who is paddling with the Angels this year.

"It's exhilarating. Honestly, being kind of in the middle of nowhere, seeing the sunrise come up," Lindsay said. "It's an unexplainable feeling that I hope everyone locally gets the chance to experience the water."

"I think what's really changed is the camaraderie the community that's come together," said Tatiana Tims, who is a spokesperson for Piper's Angels. "We have a lot of experienced paddlers coming back, but we also have a lot of new paddlers coming in. We like to say people come for the challenge and stay for the cause."

About Piper's Angels:

"The charity and The Crossing were founded by Travis Suit whose daughter Piper, now 16, was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis at age four. An avid paddler himself, he learned about the benefits that salt air has for those with this chronic, and often fatal, disease. As he joined the CF community, he was inspired to help other families in his situation care for their loved ones."

What do you want me to Shine A Light on? What are you most proud of where you live? Email me at tawalker@wptv.com.

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Youngest team ever will make cystic fibrosis crossing from Bahamas to Lake Worth Beach - WPTV News Channel 5 West Palm

Bahamas Bowl returns to Nassau on January 4 – caribbeannationalweekly.com

ESPN announced the Bahamas Bowl, the longest-running international bowl game in college football history, will return to Nassau, Bahamas after a one-year absence. The game will be played on Saturday, Jan. 4, at 11 a.m. ET and televised live on ESPN.

This will be the first time the Bahamas Bowl has been played in January and the first time the game has been played on a Saturday.

The Bahamas Bowl is played at Thomas A. Robinson Stadium in Nassau, which was undergoing renovations last year in advance of the recently completed World Athletics Relays track and field competition. That event attracted top athletes from around the world in their final qualifying push for the 2024 Paris Olympics.

We are thrilled to bring the Bahamas Bowl back to its long-time home in Nassau, said Lea Miller-Tooley, Executive Director of the Bahamas Bowl.

It is a once-in-a-lifetime experience for the teams and their fans, who will enjoy the newly refurbished stadium. The Saturday date gives local Bahamian sports fans their best opportunity ever to see the game.

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We are excited to welcome back the Bahamas Bowl which has been a highlight of our destinations annual sports calendar for close to a decade, said Chester Cooper, Bahamas Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Tourism, Investments & Aviation.

The media coverage generated by this premier international sporting event provides invaluable exposure for The Islands of The Bahamas at the height of winter when consumers in our key markets are craving beach and sunshine.

Our destination takes pride in being the designated home of the longest-running international American college football bowl, said Latia Duncombe, Director General of the Bahamas Ministry of Tourism, Investments & Aviation. The Bahamas reputation as the regions leading sports tourism destination is reflected in the diverse lineup of world-class sporting meets that are held annually within our shores.

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One of 17 bowl games owned and operated by ESPN Events, the event has traditionally showcased teams from Conference USA and the Mid-American Conference.

Past winners include UAB in 2022, Middle Tennessee in 2021, Buffalo in 2019, FIU in 2018, Ohio in 2017, Old Dominion in 2016, Western Michigan in 2015 and Western Kentucky in 2014.

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Bahamas Bowl returns to Nassau on January 4 - caribbeannationalweekly.com

Charles Sealy appointed lead consultant for Bahamas Wellness Health System – EyeWitness News

NASSAU, BAHAMASBahamas Wellness Health System (BWHS) has announced the appointment of Charles Sealy as Lead Consultant. Sealy will provide strategic operational and financial support and project management for its four medical centers, three in Eleuthera and one in New Providence.

Bahamas Wellness President Dr. Arlington Lightbourne called Sealy a proven and passionate leader with significant experience in healthcare management in The Bahamas.

Sealy, who holds a graduate degree in healthcare administration and a degree in law from the University of London, served as CEO of Doctors Hospital for 13 of his 22-year career helping to build that institution into a highly recognized private care facility in the country. Since leaving Doctors Hospital, he has built a successful consultancy company along with several businesses, including SEACOAST Shipping Services and Narvi FX, an audio-visual production company, both of those enterprises based on his desire to bring the best technology to everyday services.

Bahamas Wellness Health System started with a 10-year plan that we exceeded by Year Five, said Dr. Lightbourne.

It has not been easy, and we would never be where we are today without the incredible support of the Eleuthera community. We want to continue to earn the trust the community has graced us with and we are grateful to have someone of Charles Sealys experience, knowledge and dedication to help us do that in every step we take in depth of expansion. Charles understands and appreciates our culture which is people before profits and affordable health care for all both in Eleuthera and in Nassau.

Founded in 2016 with one office on Collins Avenue in Nassau, BWHS has expanded to four clinics with a staff complement of 40 medical professionals and support staff as well as a roster of rotating physicians who provide specialty services in vision, dental, obstetrics and gynecology, podiatry, dermatology, diabetes management, gastroenterology, nutrition and wellness and more. Its flagship clinic, the Eleuthera Medical Centre in North Palmetto Point, serves as the islands emergency room with advanced in-house diagnostic facilities and comprehensive treatment. It has emerged as a foundational community institution. When it became the first facility to bring mammography services to Eleuthera in 2023, there was a waiting list of more than 100 women.

We know how difficult it is for many women in Eleuthera to make that trek to Nassau every year for their breast exam. Our priority was to bring the ability to have an annual mammogram to them, Dr. Lightbourne explained. The clinic also has state-of-the-art x-ray and lab capabilities. During the COVID-19 epidemic, it served thousands remaining open 24/7 for emergencies.

While we are a for-profit health care provider, we hold fast to our underlying all commitment to ensure maximum access to services and to be an integral stakeholder in the community. We will never turn away an elderly grandmother who cannot pay. Someday, that could be your grandmother or mine at the door who needs medical attention, said Dr. Lightbourne, who worked as an Emergency Room physician at both PMH and Doctors Hospital before going into private practice.

I have every confidence that Charles Sealy shares that commitment, he continued. His dedication to community and volunteerism is well-known. Mr. Sealy is a Royal Bahamas Police Force Reservist and has been an active Rotarian for more than 25 years, holding several leadership positions including District Governor in 2020-2021, responsible for oversight of Rotary club activities in 10 countries in the Caribbean.

Bahamas Wellness operates clinics in North Palmetto Point, Spanish Wells and Lower Bogue in Eleuthera and in Nassau. Its board of directors includes Robert Pantry, Khaalis Rolle, Michele Johnson, Dr. Leonardo Culmer, Dr. Lightbourne and Diane Phillips, Chair. Mr. Sealy will join the board in the capacity of his appointment effective immediately.

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Charles Sealy appointed lead consultant for Bahamas Wellness Health System - EyeWitness News

Catch of the Week: Fishing is on fire locally and in The Bahamas – New Pelican Newspaper

By RJ Boyle | Contributing Columnist

We had a spectacular week of fishing starting in Bimini. We fished to the north off Great Isaacs Light and had a wonderful catch of snapper.

While we were anchored up chumming in 70 feet of water we hooked what we thought was a shark and as Scott Sansone (pictured right) approached the 30 minute mark of the fight we felt like the fish wasnt acting like a shark.

The fish would get close to the boat and then go all the way back to the bottom.

After a 45 minute fight on a light spinning rod and a baby jig for yellowtail snapper up came this 45-pound cubera snapper! What a special catch it was. Cubera snapper are difficult to catch and the only ones I have ever caught were with Capt.

Bouncer Smith as he specializes in cubera fishing off Miami during the June and July full moon. We used live lobsters for bait. This fish will be immortalized as a trophy that will hang in my shop as it was one of the best catches I have ever seen on light tackle. After the catch we celebrated Eric Finkelsteins birthday (pictured left).

Locally the mahi-mahi bite was excellent almost all week, both near shore and further offshore. Seaweed patches have been holding fish so keep an eye out this weekend. Our charter aboard the Lisa B (pictured below) had a solid catch of Mahi. The fish were all caught trolling off Boca Raton. Mixed into the mahi catches have been some juvenile undersized fish so be sure to measure. The legal length is 20 inches to the fork and the bag limit is five fish per person or 30 per boat, whichever is less.

For up to the minute fishing report tune into thThee Paul Castronovo Papas Pilar Fishing Report on Friday morning at 6:20 a.m. on 105.9 FM. You can also call RJ Boyle Studio at 954-420-5001 for a fishing report.

Get tight!

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Catch of the Week: Fishing is on fire locally and in The Bahamas - New Pelican Newspaper