Synopsis: Domenii: Military equipment:


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#Transparent solar windows generate energy without obstructing the view Imagine being able to generate solar energy on the surface of every window


mnn.com 2014 000041.txt

Bio-Bus can travel 186 miles on a full tank of biomethane (or biomethane as they might say across the pond) gas which requires the annual waste of five people to produce according to the operator of the Bristol sewage treatment works GENECO.


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Jim Clark/AMNH) Remember that scene in Aliens where Sigourney weaver's Ellen Ripley dons a Power Loader exoskeleton to do battle with the evil alien queen?


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#$1. 7 million personal submarine lets you'fly'underwater Adventurers with deep pockets can now explore the hidden depths of the ocean,

thanks to a futuristic submarine that lets users"fly"underwater. The Deepflight Super Falcon, developed by California-based Hawkes Ocean Technologies,

"The submarine is 21 feet (6. 4 meters) long, and has a wingspan that stretches nearly 9 feet (2. 7 m). The submersible can carry two

submarines are constructed with an inner shell and an outer shell. To dive, submarines fill the space between the two shells with water,

changing the ship's density and creating so-called negative buoyancy when the gravitational tug on the sub is greater than the force of buoyancy.

When submarines remain on the water's surface the area between the two shells is filled with air,


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Just hit'print'From working guns to bionic ears 3-D printers are creating a variety of objects


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which robots are able to defuse bombs and clean up nuclear disasters.""By having flexible robots, we're contributing to the next phase of automation.


mnn.com 2015 000028.txt

Google is exploring the use of high-altitude balloons Facebook is eyeing autonomous drones and now Richard Branson and Virgin galactic are pursuing microsatellite clusters.


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as well as cap the amount of fissile weapons material it produces.""India retains, deal or no deal,

the capability to produce weapons-grade material at a far higher rate than it is believed to have done ever

says Rebecca Johnson, director of the Acronym Institute for Disarmament Diplomacy in London. Within India, DAE employees are concerned that an influx of proposed new reactors could lead to quality standards being compromised.


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because the technique used does not rely on the same DNA reassembly process used in conventional'shotgun'sequencing g


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Other nations are also stepping up the fight. Last week the Nicaraguan government reportedly declared that it would include coffee rust on a list of special research projects designed to safeguard the country s agriculture.


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The imager was placed on board a research rocket at the White sands Missile Range in New mexico and flown to the edge of space.

A team member started analysing the data on the drive back from the missile range, and immediately saw evidence of braids in the twists of coronal gas.


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The researchers do not know what triggers the reprogramming event but they suspect that the mechanism could exist in other infectious diseases."


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The genetic mingling coincided with the arrival in Australia of microliths#small stone tools that formed the tips of weapons


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"It is possible that the experience of birth triggers a set of processes that prime the brain of a premature infant to respond to language in ways that a same-aged fetus will not


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The discovery suggests new approaches to combat antibiotic resistance and boost the power of cancer therapies,


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appetite and mood#and could provide targets for future drugs to combat depression, migraines or obesity.#"


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#Carl June, an immunologist at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and a pioneer in engineering T cells to fight cancer, says that he is surprised that the method worked so well against such a swift-growing cancer.


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Shining a light on the cells triggers a cascade of biochemical reactions that transfer electrons along a chain of molecules#and switches the transistor on.


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and despite the ongoing sequester and other budget battles, White house officials seemed optimistic that the plan would get a bipartisan thumbs-up.


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and these can trigger rhythmic movements in the legs. sing statistical methods, we were able to identify a small number of basic patterns that underlie muscle activities in the legs and control periodic activation or deactivation of muscles to produce cyclical movements,


neurosciencenews.com 2015 000074.txt

Scientists still do not know what triggers the majority of Alzheimer s cases making it difficult to develop a treatment.


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versus creating a reactive response which shields the electronics. Lieber said the stiffness of flexible electronic sensor is four to six orders magnitude bigger than current electronics. ells can penetrate through this,

Brain-Zapping Implant Could Aid Injured Soldiers The authors of the paper say next step is to use the mesh system to deliver living stem cells that may help repair damaged sections of the brain or perhaps a multifunction electronic device


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What It Like to Ride in a Fighter jet? Find Outoddly, the research has a connection to another focal point of conspiracy theoristshe 9-11 attacks.


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#'Edible Barcodes'Help Fight Counterfeit Drugs Who knew that the answer to fighting the trillion-dollar global counterfeit drug problem rested in a particle the size of a speck of dust?


news.sciencemag.org 2015 0000158.txt

Soon they may become a leading weapon in the global fight against disease. Researchers have designed a cheap,


news.sciencemag.org 2015 0000333.txt

it would be needed a much weapon against several increasingly hard-to-treat infections. Many existing antibiotics, including penicillin,

were identified by cultivating naturally occurring microorganismsacteria often try to kill each other with chemical warfare, it turns out.


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#'Superspreading event'triggers MERS explosion in South korea SEOULUTHORITIES in South korea are scrambling to contain an outbreak of the deadly Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome (MERS.


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a court in The netherlands today ordered the Dutch government to dramatically intensify its fight against climate change.

a lawyer, argued that the legal community should become much more active in the fight against climate change,


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They want everyone to have the chance to use space imagery to settle legal disputes from homeowners disputing garden boundaries to businesses fighting vehicle theft.

In cases where images with greater resolution are needed the pair plan to use aerial imagery from drones provided local aviation and privacy laws permit.


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Hydrogen fuel cells can power vehicles ranging from cars to submarines and rockets. They can also heat buildings


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The mysterious rock may be known the first piece of the bullet that sparked an explosion of life on early Earth.


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The waves were said to be the smoking gun evidence for the theory of inflation which suggests that space expanded faster than the speed of light in the first moments after the universe's birth.


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and one day people on the surface of Mars. The Low density supersonic decelerator (LDSD) will be lofted into the stratosphere from the US NAVY's Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai.


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Though examples date back to the cold war the most recent case relates to China. China has been banned for years from participating in the ISS

and the cold war ended the US pragmatically merged its human spaceflight programme specifically the ISS programme with the Soviet Mir space station programme inherited by the new Russian state.

After all space technology is largely dual use of value to both military and civilian communities. The basics of rocket technology and missile technology are largely symbiotic.

It seemed a good idea at the time. Then after spending decades building the ISS the US cancelled the space shuttle the vehicle originally intended for transport to the ISS as part of its post-Apollo programme.


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#Earth raises a plasma shield to battle solar storms Earth can raise shields to protect itself against solar storms.


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Our solar system has a tail reminiscent of a four-leaf clover according to new observations of the plasma bubble that shields the solar system from the rest of the galaxy.

and spreads the heliosphere into a bullet shape with an extended tail at the back (see image).


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#Tabletop accelerator shoots cheap antimatter bullets Make way for the antimatter gun. A tabletop device just 10 square metres in size can spit out energetic bursts of positrons as dense as those kicked out by the giant particle-factories at CERN.

Each positron-packed bullet lasts for just a fraction of a second so don't expect to fill the tank of your antimatter engine any time soon.

The team call their device an antimatter gun because the bursts of positrons last just 30 femtoseconds (quadrillionths of a second).

This article will appear in print under the headline Antimatter bullets get fast and chea a


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The launch continues the execution of an orderly programme laid out in the 1990s says Joan Johnson-Freese of the US Naval War College in Newport Rhode island.


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Developing cybersecurity policy frameworks for autonomous vehicles like drones and self-driving cars; andhow to achieve regional and even global agreements on both privacy and security norms in online environments.


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if you were in the military and youe trying to screen for some disease, but you don have a lab with you.


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package-delivering drones, and other autonomous, route-planning vehicles. s designers, when we can compare the robot perceptions with how it acts,

In one scenario, the team is looking into the role of drones in fighting forest fires. Such drones may one day be used both to survey

and to squelch fires first observing a fire effect on various types of vegetation, then identifying and putting out those fires that are most likely to spread.

To make fire-fighting drones a reality the team is first testing the possibility virtually.

In addition to projecting a drone intentions, the researchers can also project landscapes to simulate an outdoor environment.

shown from an aerial perspective to simulate a drone view as if it were flying over treetops.

the team plans to use the system to test drone performance in package-delivery scenarios.


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As a small company you ll lose a fair fight with another technology#you have to have some overpowering advantage that they can t match you on he says.


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The work was supported by the National institutes of health the Army Research Office through MIT s Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies and the Department of energy y


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It s very similar to fighter jets which are made unstable so that you can maneuver them easily she says.

Nathan Betcher a special-tactics officer in the U s. Air force has followed Bhattacharyya and Asada s work closely.


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MIT engineers have turned now a powerful new weapon on these superbugs. Using a gene-editing system that can disable any target gene they have shown that they can selectively kill bacteria carrying harmful genes that confer antibiotic resistance or cause disease.

We ve been interested in finding new ways to combat antibiotic resistance and these papers offer two different strategies for doing that.

Lu and colleagues decided to turn bacteria s own weapons against them. They designed their RNA guide strands to target genes for antibiotic resistance including the enzyme NDM-1


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At a certain trigger temperature the coils contract to their remembered form such as a fully coiled spring tightening the cuff in the process.

However at a certain trigger temperature (in this case as low as 60 C) the fiber will begin to spring back to its trained tightly coiled state.

and active materials may be used for other purposes such as in athletic wear or military uniforms. You could use this as a tourniquet system

if someone is bleeding out on the battlefield Holschuh says. If your suit happens to have sensors it could tourniquet you in the event of injury without you even having to think about it.


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either on uniforms or on vehicles, could allow the camouflage patterns to constantly change in response to the surroundings. he U s. military spends millions developing different kinds of camouflage patterns,

Zhao says. odern warfare requires troops to deploy in many different environments during single missions.


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#Making drones more customizable A first-ever standard perating systemfor drones, developed by a startup with MIT roots, could soon help manufacturers easily design

Today, hundreds of companies worldwide are making drones for infrastructure inspection, crop-and livestock-monitoring,

and application-specific software to add to commercial drones for multiple purposes. The key component is the startup Linux-based autopilot device,

a small red box that is installed into all of a client drones. his is responsible for flying the vehicle in a safe, reliable manner,

who researched and built drones throughout his time at MIT. To customize the drones customers use software to select third-party drone vehicles and components such as sensors, cameras, actuators,

and communication devices configure settings, and apply their configuration to a fleet. Other software helps them plan

and monitor missions in real time (and make midflight adjustments), and collects and displays data. Airware then pushes all data to the cloud,

If a company decides to use a surveillance drone for crop management, for instance, it can easily add software that stitches together different images to determine which areas of a field are overwatered

Delta Drone in France is using the platform for open-air mining operations, search-and-rescue missions,

Another UAV maker, Cyber Technology in Australia, is using the platform for drones responding to car crashes and other disasters,

and infrastructure with drones that require specific cameras and sensors as potential early customers. A company from scratch Airware roots date to 2005,

Phd 3 to build drones for an intercollegiate competition. At the time, drones were used primarily for military surveillance,

powered by a lack boxthat could essentially fly the drones and control the camera. There were also a handful of open-source projects made by hobbyists that let people modify drones

but the code was tweaked unreliable when. f you wanted to do anything novel, your hands were tied,

Downey says. The group decision: build a drone from scratch. But their advisor, Jonathan How, a professor of aeronautics and astronautics who directs of the Aerospace Controls Laboratory,

told them that required too much time, and would cost them the competition. e said, oue right,

A five-year stretch at Boeing as an engineer for the U s. military A160 Hummingbird UAV and as a commercial pilot put Downey in contact with drone manufacturers, who,

then with Michini and a team of Boeing engineers to make a military-grade lack boxsystem,

Not much of the early MIT drone designs made it into the final Airware platform. ut building that early drone at MIT

the development of a standard operating system for drones is analogous to Intel processors and Microsoft DOS paving the way for personal computers in the 1980s.

without needing to know details of the underlying hardware. ee doing the same thing for the drone space,

Downey says. here are 600 companies building differing versions of drone hardware. We think they need the Intel processor of the drones,

if you will, and that operating system-level software component, too like the DOS for drones.

The benefits are far-reaching, Downey says: rone companies, for instance, want to build drones and tailor them for different applications without having to build everything from scratch,

he says. But companies developing cameras, sensors, and communication links for drones also stand to benefit,

he adds, as their components will need only to be compatible with a single platform. Additionally, it could help the Federal aviation administration (FAA) better assess the reliability of drones;

Congress recently tasked the agency with compiling UAV rules and regulations by 2015. This could also help promote commercial drone use in the United states,

which lags behind other countries around the world, primarily in Europe, Downey says. ather than see a world where there 500 drones flying overhead,

and every drone has different software and electronics, it good for the FAA if all of them had reliable and common hardware and software,

he says. e think it valuable for everybody. n


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#Manual control When you imagine the future of gesture-control interfaces, you might think of the popular science-fiction films inority Report (2002) or ron Man (2008).


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along with Leurent who actually started FEA work with Patera group back in 2000 earned a Deshpande innovation grant for their upercomputing-on-a-smartphoneinnovation. hat was a trigger,


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This very small chemical modification triggers a sequence of events where that gene is expressed no longer Sikes says.


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The work was funded by the National Science Foundation the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Research at Harvard and the Air force Office of Scientific research h


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This research was supported by funding from the Air force Office of Scientific research r


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#Extracting audio from visual information Algorithm recovers speech from the vibrations of a potato-chip bag filmed through soundproof glass.


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It fires infrared laser light at the missile which would confuse the missile s programming and cause it to lose its target.

The laser s compact design would allow it to be mounted on a fighter jet. With the Terablade technology Huang says The sky is the limit literally y


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#$650 million commitment to Stanley Center at Broad Institute aims to galvanize mental illness research The following is adapted from a press release issued today by the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.

As president of Merck Research Laboratories Scolnick led the development of the first drugs to effectively combat HIV;


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and water that s extracted is put in large tanks to allow separation by gravity; the oil gradually floats to the top where it can be skimmed off.


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Think of the electricity as water being transferred via bucket from a full tank to an empty tank

In that analogy, the bucket is the adapter that collects the water (electricity) from a full tank (outlet) and dumps it into an empty tank (laptop battery.

say, a gallon of water per minute from the full tank to the empty tank,

with conventional adapters youe dipping a one-gallon bucket into the full tank once a minute,


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In 2012 Altaeros after just two years of refining proved the BAT s efficiency at 300 feet above ground at a former Air force base in Maine where the company still assembles


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Many applications such as submarines sonar systems instead use two-dimensional arrays and in that case the savings compound:


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-and-calf system to more than 900 patients worldwide including some 400 war veterans. It s always good to design something people will use.


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The research was funded by the U s. Air force, the Office of the Assistant Secretary of defense for Research and Engineering, the Singapore-MIT Alliance, the National Science Foundation, the U s army Research Office,


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The work was supported in part by the Army Research Office, through MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies,


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The research was funded by the Office of Naval Research the Army Research Office the National Science Foundation the Hertz Foundation the Department of defense the National institutes of health and the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers s


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Strano and the paper lead author, postdoc and plant biologist Juan Pablo Giraldo, envision turning plants into self-powered, photonic devices such as detectors for explosives or chemical weapons.


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But the comparatively simple maneuver of swimming back and forth across a tank drains the canister quickly.


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It was valuable to hear their war stories and get their take on some of the challenges they were facing.


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version of Batman famed utility-belt grappling gun: At the pull of a trigger, the handheld device can hoist two people about 30 stories up a rope in 30 seconds.

Exciting, for sure. But despite its appeal as what Atlas cofounder and APA co-inventor Nathan Ball 5, SM 7 calls a ee-whiz gadgetwith seemingly limitless,

Roughly the size of a small shoebox, the aluminum-cased APA which began as a prototype for MIT Soldier Design Competition in 2005 has a handle with direction control switches (up or down) and a trigger.

capstan-based mechanism ensures that the battery-powered device can lift two soldiers sometimes carrying 80 to 100 pounds of equipment swiftly along an attached rope, without jamming.

First designed for soldiers who plunged into caves and wells in Iraq and Afghanistan the APA is now being used by all four military branches on the battlefield and in training to climb mountains, buildings, and ships.

It even being used in helicopter extraction and rescue missions. Finding steady success with its military customers, Atlas is now expanding its Charlestown, Mass.

and Daniel Walker 5, SM 9 for the annual MIT Soldier Design Competition, which challenges student teams to invent technologies based on military requests.

Additional help came from MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies. Ball specifically credits former technology transfer specialist Lisa Shaler-Clark as instrumental in taking the APA rom the lab bench to the field.


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And while those calling for sweeping, emission-focused policies have faced often uphill battles in regions, states,


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The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Army Research Office through MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies t


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and CEO David Lucchino MBA 6 is developing a novel biomaterial for implanted medical devices that permanently barricades these troublesome microbes from the device surface.


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Armies of mobile cubes could temporarily repair bridges or buildings during emergencies, or raise and reconfigure scaffolding for building projects.

In ongoing work, the MIT researchers are building an army of 100 cubes, each of which can move in any direction,


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the Center for Materials science and engineering, the Center for Sensorimotor Neural engineering, the Mcgovern Institute for Brain Research, the U s army Research Office through the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies,


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since more than 4 million homes and buildings in cities across the United states for military, commercial,


newsoffice.mit.edu 2015 00613.txt.txt

The work was supported by the National Science Foundation and the Air force Office of Scientific research


newsoffice.mit.edu 2015 00622.txt.txt

#Defusing bombs by color This March, Cambodia held its first national-level science festival at the Royal University of Phnom penh,

attracting over 10,000 young students to the science booths over the course of three days.

The demining process, called explosive ordnance disposal (EOD), is dangerous but necessary work. It is estimated that there are still 4 to 6 million unexploded pieces of ordnance in Cambodia,

which was bombed heavily during the Vietnam war. The repercussions have been severe: Between 1979 and 2013, there were over 40,000 reported injuries and nearly 20,000 fatalities due to unexploded land mines.

whereas real parts of bombs are allowed never. Vandiver made the organization first 3-D printed land mine example from an existing computer-aided design (CAD) model of a Russian antipersonnel landmine.

and create a training set consisting of 10 explosive devices commonly encountered by workers in Cambodia.

and work with the 3-D printed models to learn by discovery how different bombs

and also served as a lieutenant in the U s army Corps of Engineers in Vietnam in 1970-1971.

The completed set of 10 3-D models of mortar, artillery, and bomb fuses have been received well in the humanitarian EOD community.

Golden West is receiving orders from around the world for models made on 3-D printers set up by Golden West in Phnom penh.

Because of the high demand for these effective, portable training sets, the U s. Department of state has funded an extension of the project to produce training sets for cluster bombs and land mines.


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folded or even penetrated by bullets without failing. This should improve both safety and durability,


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#Alumnus throwable tactical camera gets commercial release Unseen areas are troublesome for police and first responders:

Bounce Imaging will deploy 100 Explorers to police departments nationwide, with aims of branching out to first responders and other clients in the near future.

For this first manufacturing run, the startup aims to gather feedback from police, who operate in what Aguilar calls a eputation-heavy market. ou want to make sure you deliver well for your first customer,

Bounce Imaging started fielding numerous requests from police departments which became its target market. Months of rigorous testing with departments across New england led Bounce Imaging from a clunky prototype of the Explorer Medusa of cables

But they also learned key lessons about what police needed. Among the most important lessons, Aguilar says,

is that police are under so much pressure in potentially dangerous situations that they need something very easy to use. e had loaded the system up with all sorts of options and buttons and nifty things but really,

after the Explorer release, Aguilar says Bounce Imaging may option its image-stitching technology for drones, video games, movies,


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Using magnetic tweezers to stretch cells we were able to further activate cell signalling pathways to trigger cell death.


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This could lead to novel treatment and vaccination strategies in the fight against malaria and other infectious diseases.


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#Research team developing injectable treatment for soldiers wounded in battle Internal bleeding is a leading cause of death on the battlefield,

and the Massachusetts institute of technology could buy wounded soldiers the time they need to survive by preventing blood loss from serious internal injuries.

Gaharwar envisions the biomaterial being preloaded into syringes that soldiers can carry with them into combat situations.

If a soldier experiences a penetrating, incompressible injury one where it is difficult if not impossible to apply the pressure needed to stop the bleeding he

which today are the result of explosive devices, rupture blood vessels and create internal hemorrhages through which a person is constantly losing blood,"Gaharwar notes."


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The dsrna then triggers a genetic chain reaction that destroys specific MESSENGER RNA or mrna in the developing insects.


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These characteristics mark the trail heads of a variety of paths for research on this nanocomposite material for applications from flexible armor to aerospace components.


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