Archive for the ‘transportation’ category: Page 562
Mar 7, 2016
Crowdsourcing The Hyperloop: How A Group Of Redditors Are Taking On Elon Musk’s Challenge
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: Elon Musk, engineering, law, sustainability, transportation
VideoDisclaimer: The author of this article, Jason Belzer, is a member of rLoop and serves as the non-profit’s legal counsel. When billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk proposed the Hyperloop — a futuristic transportation system capable of propelling passengers to supersonic speeds — back in 2013, it is unlikely that even he could have imagined that just a few years later his vision would be tantalizing close to reality. Yet ironically, Musk, who has helped build companies like Tesla Motors and SpaceX that are on the leading edge of technological innovation, will not receive the credit if the Hyperloop indeed becomes a reality. Instead, that honor will be bestowed upon on a small group of teams now working feverishly to construct a prototype that will be tested this summer at SpaceX headquarters in California.
Imagine tackling one of the most complex engineering projects in the history of the human race, requiring countless hours of collaboration and experimentation by some of the world’s most talented engineers, and never actually meeting the people you are working with in a physical setting. You might think it’s impossible, or you might be a member of rLoop — the only non student team to reach the final stage of the SpaceX Hyperloop Pod Competition.
Mar 6, 2016
Can You Download Knowledge Into Your Brain With Electricity?
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: military, neuroscience, transportation
A cognitive neuroscientist and his team at HRL Laboratories in Malibu, California, seem to have achieved the impossible.
According to a press release, the team “measured the brain activity patterns of six commercial and military pilots, and then transmitted these patterns into novice subjects as they learned to pilot an airplane in a realistic flight simulator.”
Continue reading “Can You Download Knowledge Into Your Brain With Electricity?” »
Mar 6, 2016
New Metal Can Become Soft and Stiff Just Like Human Muscles
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, engineering, robotics/AI, transportation
This looks very promising.
The human body is designed pretty well: Our muscles are able to switch between strength and dexterity, limbs stiffening when we do an energy-fueled task like lifting a bowling ball and softening when we do something delicate like painting with a brush. This ability is very rarely replicated in engineering systems, namely because it’s expensive, but also because it’s been damn hard to clone.
Continue reading “New Metal Can Become Soft and Stiff Just Like Human Muscles” »
Mar 5, 2016
The darkest material on Earth has become even darker
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: electronics, materials, transportation
New material improving stealth mode vehicles and planes.
When Surrey NanoSystems introduced the original Vantablack, the company said the carbon nanotube material is capable of absorbing 99.96 percent of light that touches it. It’s so dark, it can fool your eyes into seeing a smooth surface even when the nanotubes were actually grown on crumpled foil (seriously — watch the video below the fold). Well, the new version of Vantablack is darker than that. In fact, Surrey can’t even give us the percentage of light that gets absorbed, because its spectrometers can’t measure it.
In this video below (and the GIF above), you can see the material engulf the laser pointer in darkness when it moves across:
Continue reading “The darkest material on Earth has become even darker” »
Mar 4, 2016
Goodyear Thinks Tires Of The Future Will Be 3D-Printed Spheres
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: 3D printing, transportation
These #3Dprinted sphere-shaped tires could be the future of automobiles thanks to Goodyear.
Mar 3, 2016
Audi RSQ | Sporty Coupé for the 2004 “I, Robot” | CES Asia 2015
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: education, engineering, robotics/AI, transportation
Audi RSQ – a fantastic car. Certainly a design icon, but first of all, a movie star. The Audi RSQ was the first car we developed for a motion picture – with great success. This sporty coupé for the 2004 Hollywood science-fiction “I, Robot” was a visionary concept of what a car might look like in 2035. Four designers, ten model engineers, ten weeks, all creative liberties – that’s what it took to create this Audi of the future.
What was really unique and visionary about the Audi RSQ: It was the first Audi demonstrating piloted driving capabilities. Here is one of my favorite moments in the movie – a moment that tells you a lot about piloted driving:
Continue reading “Audi RSQ | Sporty Coupé for the 2004 ‘I, Robot’ | CES Asia 2015” »
Mar 3, 2016
Spherical tire takes autonomous cars sideways into the future
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
The Goodyear Eagle-360 concept tire.
Goodyear has taken the wraps off two concept tires designed for the autonomous cars of tomorrow – including a spherical tire that allow cars to drive sideways and one that can sense road conditions and adapt to them.
Mar 3, 2016
The Goodyear Eagle-360 concept tire
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
Spherical tire takes autonomous cars sideways into the future.
Mar 3, 2016
Mercedes-Benz BIOME Concept – could cars be grown in a lab?
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: transportation
Mercedes-Benz has developed a car that would be grown in a lab rather built on a production line.