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Scientists watch a solar system being born for the first ever time

Scientists watch a solar system being born for the first ever time

Independent3 days ago
Scientists have watched another solar system being born for the first ever time.
Using a powerful telescope, researchers saw the first pieces of material that will go onto form planets.
A solar system has never been seen this early in its formation before. Researchers hope that the breakthrough discovery will allow for a new understanding of how such systems form – including our own.
The findings are like 'a picture of the baby Solar System', said Merel van 't Hoff, a professor at Purdue University, USA, and a co-author on the new study. 'We're seeing a system that looks like what our Solar System looked like when it was just beginning to form.'
The work is described in a new paper, 'Refractory solid condensation detected in an embedded protoplanetary disk', published in the journal Nature.
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Woke university funded by Epstein discussed giving 'child sex robots' to pedophiles
Woke university funded by Epstein discussed giving 'child sex robots' to pedophiles

Daily Mail​

time7 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Woke university funded by Epstein discussed giving 'child sex robots' to pedophiles

A leading university previously funded by disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein hosted a panel discussing the use of 'child sex robots ' to treat pedophiles. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)'s Media Lab ran the discussion in July 2016. The panel discussed pedophilia as an 'affliction' that could be treated with 'child sex robots,' an inevitable invention to the hit the market one day, according to the discussion. The conference discussing the controversial topic occurred around the time that the then-MIT Media Lab Director Joi Ito exchanged frequent communications with Epstein. Epstein was found to have made ten donations to the institution, totaling $850,000, and claimed to have organized donations worth millions of dollars by others, a 2020 report found. The financier was a convicted pedophile who died in his cell while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges in 2019. A transcript of the panel's discussion raised questions surrounding the morality of sexual robotics, specifically surrounding pedophiles and 'child-size sex robots'. It further discussed how ethical the use of robots in child-like form was to research, or control and maybe even cure the urges of a pedophile. 'This question of normalization also raises this question of, if people are regularly relieving urges with child robots, is that also a normalization of behavior?' one panelist, former MIT Center for Civic Media Director Ethan Zuckerman said. 'And is that a danger that by normalizing that behavior, regularizing that behavior, that this becomes less of a taboo and in some sense this actually may become more dangerous in terms of pedophilia acceptance?' The panel further discussed the research element of using such robotics for the betterment of sexual deviants. One panelist, MIT Graduate Program in Science Writing Associate Director Christina Couch, even compared such potential research to results found in studies conducted using virtual reality for those who suffer, or have suffered, from sexual trauma or PTSD. 'It's worth mentioning that virtual reality is also being used to study and treat people who are victims of sexual trauma, as well. So this is not a one-way street,' Couch said. 'So when we talk about amplifying research methods, it's not just for offenders. Those types of applications can also, in some cases, be used to actually help victims as well.' Couch also said it would not be 'tremendously crazy' that people could 'use this type of technology to actually change behavior within pedophiles'. 'It's certainly a thing that is worth looking into,' she added. The panel discussed how ethical the use of robots in child-like form was to research, or control and maybe even cure the urges of a pedophile The panel further discussed how ethical the use of robots in child-like form was to research, or control and maybe even cure the urges of a pedophile MIT Media Lab Director Joi Ito has since apologized for his relationship with Epstein. Ito accepted money from Epstein for the lab as well as his private venture capital funds, and was also found to have visited his properties, including the island of Little St. James, the Wall Street Journal reported. In 2019, Ito issued an apology statement regarding his relationship with Epstein. 'I want you to know that in all of my interactions with Epstein, I was never involved in, never heard him talk about, and never saw any evidence of the horrific acts that he was accused of,' he wrote. 'Regrettably, over the years, the Lab has received money through some of the foundations that he controlled. I knew about these gifts and these funds were received with my permission. I also allowed him to invest in several of my funds which invest in tech startup companies outside of MIT.' Ito vowed to raise the equivalent amount of funds donated to the lab by Epstein himself and direct the money to non-profits that 'focus on supporting survivors of trafficking.' But Epstein's relationship with MIT predates Ito, who was introduced to him in 2013 by former Media Lab Advisory Council member Linda Stone. Epstein was also close to the lab's co-founder Marvin Minsky. 'As you might know, I was very close to Marvin Minsky for quite a long time [and] I funded some of Marvin's projects,' Epstein told Science Magazine in 2017. The 2020 report further found that Epstein had visited the MIT campus multiple times, and the lab's director had thought over inviting the convicted pedophile to one of its conferences in the same month as the panel discussing parahelia. In July of 2016, the only conference set to be hosted by the lab, according to its website, was the one on sexual deviance and 'child sex robots'. Epstein's visits to the MIT campus occurred at least nine times between 2013 and 2017, sometimes bringing 'assistants on some visits' who were young women, the report stated. In a 2017 interview with Science Magazine, Epstein said that his support for the university stemmed from his gravitation toward 'rebels who don't fit in'. 'The MIT Media Lab is a good example,' he said. 'I would say 25% of the kids there are autistic, on the spectrum. They don't really work in my natural bent to move toward the maverick and rebels who don't fit in.' The university's close workings with Epstein come to light again as the public continues to call for the release of The Epstein Files. On Friday, Attorney General Pam Bondi filed a pair of motions to release highly-secretive grand jury testimony from the Epstein case. The move came after nearly two full weeks of President Donald Trump's MAGA base demanded the administration make public all details of the investigation into the disgraced financier and convicted child sex offender. The DOJ also filed a motion in the case against Epstein's longtime associate and friend Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving her sex trafficking sentence while also appealing her case to the U.S. Supreme Court. Trump finally gave into the pressure on Thursday night when he instructed Bondi to make more materials public. It came after the Wall Street Journal published details of a 'bawdy' 50th birthday card it said he allegedly sent to Epstein in 2003. The president denies he wrote the letter and threatened to sue the publication.

NASA's ‘Son of Concorde' jet that will HALVE flight time from US to London step closer to take-off with runway test
NASA's ‘Son of Concorde' jet that will HALVE flight time from US to London step closer to take-off with runway test

The Sun

time7 minutes ago

  • The Sun

NASA's ‘Son of Concorde' jet that will HALVE flight time from US to London step closer to take-off with runway test

NASA's supersonic "Son of Concorde" plane which will halve the travel time between London and New York is zooming ever closer to take-off. The X-59 jet will even break the sound barrier when it flies - but won't produce a sonic boom, thanks to its unique design. 5 5 5 When up and running, the aircraft will hurtle along at altitudes of at speeds of 937mph at 55,000 feet up. Nasa revealed it struck another milestone in the plane's journey toward the skies with crucial low-speed taxiing tests. The X-59 moved around purely under its own power for the first time at US Air Force Plant 42 on July 10. Taxiing is the final stage of ground tests before Nasa can take it up into the skies - and the maiden voyage is chalked for later this year. Over the coming weeks, pilots will gradually increase the speed on the runway - leading to high-speed manoeuvres when it will travel fast enough to take off. Engineers tested key systems like steering and breaking during the low-speed run through. Nasa said: "These checks help ensure the aircraft's stability and control across a range of conditions, giving pilots and engineers confidence that all systems are functioning as expected." The X-59 is the crown jewel in Nasa's Quesst mission - which aims to prove supersonic flight is possible without a deafening sonic boom. Instead, the X-59 will produce a much quieter sonic "thump". Currently, commercial passenger planes are banned from going at such speeds – if they were able to – over land in the UK and US on account of the noise levels. Near-supersonic jet that can fly London-New York at speeds 'not seen since Concorde' unveiled with luxury living spaces The 30m-long and 9m-wide X-59 has a sharp, stiletto-style nose that engineers believe will reduce the noise The space agency believes their new jet could fly from London to New York in three-and-a-half hours. Lori Ozoroski, a project manager at Nasa, previously said: "We had a commercial supersonic aircraft, the Concorde. "But it was limited during its flights that it could not fly, say into, you know, somewhere in the middle of the U.S. "You were not allowed to fly supersonic over land. 5 5 "So most of the flights were back and forth just over the ocean. And so again, that ban has been in place for 50 years, over 50 years in the US. "A lot of international countries as well have similar bans. "And so the whole goal of this research that we're doing right now is to lift that ban and set a speed limit for commercial supersonic aircraft rather than a speed limit." Lori added: "The sound level is more like – we've done studies – it's more like a car door closing, you know, across the street at your neighbour's house rather than the very loud typical sonic boom."

Astronomers just casually witnessed the birth of a new solar system
Astronomers just casually witnessed the birth of a new solar system

Metro

time2 hours ago

  • Metro

Astronomers just casually witnessed the birth of a new solar system

Astronomers have witnessed the creation of a solar system for the first time. Data captured by the ALMA telescope in Chile and the James Webb Space Telescope showed planets forming around a star in the first record of its kind. The findings, detailed in a study published on Wednesday, showed how scientists observed a gaseous plate being formed around a star – the first step in the birth of a new solar system. Professor Melissa McCure from the Leiden University in the Netherlands said: 'For the first time, we have identified the earliest moment when planet formation is initiated around a star other than our Sun.' The new solar system is being formed around a baby or 'proto' star named HOPS-315 located some 1300 light-years from Earth. Scientists believe the unique sighting can paint a picture of how our solar system was formed, as well as help us better understand the planetary formation process. Merel van't Hoff, of Purdue University in the USA, who co-authored the study, said the nascent planetary system resembles what our solar system would have looked like when it was beginning to form. She said: 'This system is one of the best that we know to actually probe some of the processes that happened in our Solar System.' A solar system is formed from solid material within meteorites, which condense and then bind themselves together. More Trending The pieces of matter begin to form tiny planets or 'plantesimals' before they form larger full size planets. The first minerals around HOPS-315 were detected by the James Webb Space Telescope, before the ALMA Telescope was used to identify exactly where they originated. ESO astronomer Elizabeth Humphreys, who manages the European ALMA Programme Manager said she was 'really impressed' with the study. She said: 'It suggests that HOPS-315 can be used to understand how our own Solar System formed. This result highlights the combined strength of JWST and ALMA for exploring protoplanetary discs.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: France's new rocket Baguette One to go where no baker has gone before MORE: Felix Baumgartner's chilling last Instagram post moments before he died mid-air MORE: A new world may have been discovered beyond Neptune

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