Facebook Pixel {العنوان: سلسلة} | {اسم المغناطيس: سلسلة} - {الفئة: سلسلة} - اقرأ هذه القصة على Magzter.com

يحاول ذهب - حر

SCIENTISTS GROW PLANTS IN LUNAR DIRT, NEXT STOP MOON

May 14, 2022

|

Techlife News

For the first time, scientists have grown plants in soil from the moon collected by NASA’s Apollo astronauts.

SCIENTISTS GROW PLANTS IN LUNAR DIRT, NEXT STOP MOON

Researchers had no idea if anything would sprout in the harsh moon dirt and wanted to see if it could be used to grow food by the next generation of lunar explorers. The results stunned them.

“Holy cow. Plants actually grow in lunar stuff. Are you kidding me?” said Robert Ferl of the University of Florida’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences.

Ferl and his colleagues planted thale cress in moon soil returned by Apollo 11’s Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, and other moonwalkers. The good news: All of the seeds sprouted.

The downside was that after the first week, the coarseness and other properties of the lunar soil stressed the small, flowering weeds so much that they grew more slowly than seedlings planted in fake moon dirt from Earth. Most of the moon plants ended up stunted.

المزيد من القصص من Techlife News

Techlife News

Techlife News

MUSK-ALTMAN TRIAL PUTS OPENAI STRUCTURE AT RISK

Jury selection has begun in Oakland in one of the most consequential legal fights yet to hit the artificial intelligence industry.

time to read

6 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

OPENAI PHONE CHIPS ARE STILL JUST A RUMOR

OpenAl is reportedly exploring smartphone chips with Qualcomm and MediaTek, but the project remains unconfirmed and appears to be at a very early stage.

time to read

4 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

SAMSUNG PROFITS SOAR AS AI DRIVES MEMORY SHORTAGE

Samsung Electronics reported a dramatic surge in quarterly earnings, with operating profit rising more than eight-fold year over year as demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure pushed memory prices sharply higher.

time to read

4 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

OPENAL STUMBLES AS IPO PRESSURE BUILDS

OpenAl has reportedly fallen short of internal revenue and user-growth targets at a sensitive moment, raising fresh questions about whether the company’s enormous computing commitments are outpacing the business growth needed to support them.

time to read

5 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

SOFTBANK PREPS ROZE AI IPO WITH $100B TARGET

SoftBank Group is preparing to spin out and list a new artificial intelligence and robotics company in the United States, aiming for a valuation of up to $100 billion.

time to read

4 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

CHATGPT RISE PUTS DEVELOPER HIRING UNDER PRESSURE

A new Federal Reserve working paper is putting numbers behind one of the most sensitive questions in the technology labor market: whether generative AI has already slowed hiring for software developers.

time to read

6 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

CHINA'S ORBITAL AI NETWORK GETS MUCH BIGGER

China is moving ahead with an ambitious plan to build a large space-based AI computing network, with partners around ADA Space and Zhejiang Lab aiming for a constellation that could eventually reach 2,800 satellites.

time to read

3 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

SODIUM BATTERIES GET A SUPERCOMPUTER BOOST

Researchers at UC San Diego have used the Expanse supercomputer to help design improved sodium-ion battery materials, bringing cheaper and longer-lasting large-scale energy storage a step closer.

time to read

4 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

INTEL CPU SHORTAGE OPENS DOOR FOR RIVALS

The artificial intelligence boom is reshaping the semiconductor market again, and this time the pressure is not limited to GPUs.

time to read

6 mins

Techlife News #757

Techlife News

Techlife News

APPLE ADDS MONTHLY PAY OPTION FOR ANNUAL SUBS

Apple is introducing a new billing option on the App Store that allows users to pay for annual subscriptions in monthly installments, a shift designed to make long-term plans more accessible without requiring upfront payment.

time to read

3 mins

Techlife News #757

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size