high altitude
New Jersey pilot 'lost control' after encounter with unidentified drone: report
A New Jersey drone pilot says his device lost power and was forced to descend from a restricted chunk of airspace while the mystery flier he was trying to investigate managed to stay airborne despite a signal designed to shut down legal drones. Michael B, a podcaster and paranormal investigator behind the Terror Talk Productions YouTube channel, lives near the Picatinny Arsenal, an Army facility near where dozens of sightings have been reported in recent weeks. He was flying in the area, attempting to get a closer look at a larger, unidentified object he believes is a drone. "There was a drone just hanging out," he told FOX 5 New York. "I had full battery life. Not 3 minutes into the flight, I lost control of the drone."
More than 20 days into phenomenon, Pentagon still has no answers about origins of mysterious NJ drones
Retired Gen. Anthony Tata joined'Fox & Friends' to discuss outrage stemming from the mysterious drones over flying over New Jersey and the Pentagon's lack of clarity over the sightings. More than three weeks after dozens of mysterious drones began popping up in the New Jersey night sky, the public has still been offered no clear insight on what the phenomenon could be. Rep. Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J., suggested the swarms of unmanned aerial vehicles could be from an Iranian "mother ship." "There is no Iranian ship off the coast of the United States, and there's no so-called mother ship launching drones towards the United States," said Pentagon spokesperson Sabrina Singh. She added there is "no evidence" to suggest the drones are "the work of a foreign adversary."
Modern fuel-efficient jets can cause more warming than older planes
Aeroplanes that fly at higher altitudes can create longer-lasting vapour trails that are likely to cause more global warming. Since private jets and modern fuel-efficient jets fly higher than other passenger jets, these aircraft may be causing even more warming than previously thought. The findings could help airlines work out which routes to fly to minimise contrails, says Edward Gryspeerdt at Imperial College London. "If we could predict the contrail-forming regions of the atmosphere well enough, you could route aircraft around them, which would reduce this effect." Aircraft contrails are a climate menace.
The Physics-Informed Neural Network Gravity Model: Generation III
Martin, John, Schaub, Hanspeter
Scientific machine learning and the advent of the Physics-Informed Neural Network (PINN) show considerable potential in their capacity to identify solutions to complex differential equations. Over the past two years, much work has gone into the development of PINNs capable of solving the gravity field modeling problem -- i.e.\ learning a differentiable form of the gravitational potential from position and acceleration estimates. While the past PINN gravity models (PINN-GMs) have demonstrated advantages in model compactness, robustness to noise, and sample efficiency; there remain key modeling challenges which this paper aims to address. Specifically, this paper introduces the third generation of the Physics-Informed Neural Network Gravity Model (PINN-GM-III) which solves the problems of extrapolation error, bias towards low-altitude samples, numerical instability at high-altitudes, and compliant boundary conditions through numerous modifications to the model's design. The PINN-GM-III is tested by modeling a known heterogeneous density asteroid, and its performance is evaluated using seven core metrics which showcases its strengths against its predecessors and other analytic and numerical gravity models.
Elon Musk says he's 'dying' to make a supersonic electric plane
Elon Musk has said he is "dying" to expand beyond cars and trucks with Tesla and build an electric supersonic jet. The planes would use vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) technology to rise to a high altitude, before using battery-powered propulsion to reach speeds in excess of 1,236km/h (768mph). The polymath billionaire said the only thing stopping him from developing the next-generation aircraft is his current workload. Mr Musk currently heads two multi-billion dollar companies – SpaceX and Tesla – as well as neurotech startup Neuralink and tunnel-digging venture The Boring Company. He is also the co-founder of the artificial intelligence research laboratory OpenAI and the father of six children.
Drone space launch vehicle can put satellite in orbit every 180 minutes
The world's first satellite launching drone, developed by a US-based space startup, will will be able to carry a new payload into orbit every 180 minutes, the firm claims. Aevum says the massive 80ft long drone, named the Ravn X, is fully autonomous, 70 per cent reusable, and can take off and land on runways as short as a mile long. Working in partnership with the US Space Force, the firm says it is'completely reimagining access to space' by focusing on autonomy and better logistics. The drone can take off from any runway to reach high altitude where it deploys a second stage that takes a small payload the rest of the way to space. After it has launched the second stage rocket into low Earth orbit, the drone flies itself back to its home runway, lands and then parks up in its hanger.
Conversations at High Altitude - Inside GTS Amsterdam - Welocalize
At a height of 100m up the amazing A'DAM Tower in central Amsterdam, the altitude wasn't a problem at Global Transformation Summit (GTS) but keeping up with the many shared experiences and fast exchange of ideas was! GTS Amsterdam brought together global brands, connecting international business leaders and senior marketing and localization professionals. What was the common ground? Many insights shared and new contacts made. As content types and volumes continue to increase – the growth of content on the internet doubles every 18 months – brands need to converge content, collaborate internally, and ensure the customer experience is consistent and personal, to stand out from online competition. This means re-imagining how we work – looking to define how multilingual content performs beyond traditional KPIs.
Healthcare Artificial Intelligence Market; Significant Healthcare Players Market Is All Set To Cruise to A High Altitude in Healthcare Sector By 2023
Healthcare Artificial Intelligence Market Report include on MarketReseacrhFuture.com with exhaustive Study. The report aims to provide an overview of Healthcare Artificial Intelligence Market Report. The report provides key statistics on the market status. Artificial intelligence (AI) or machine intelligence technology using sophisticated algorithms to detect patterns for enabling machines to sense, comprehend, and learn tasks needing human intelligence. Artificial intelligence mimics human intelligence capabilities such as learning, reasoning, and pattern recognition to drive machine decisions.
Amazon's Alexa says chemtrails are a government conspiracy theory
If you ask Alexa what chemtrails are, you might be surprised by what she says. The voice assistant has been spouting a government conspiracy theory as an explanation for the oft-debated condensation trails. Alexa has been recorded telling users: 'Chemtrails are trails left by aircraft [that] are actually chemical or biological agents deliberately sprayed at high altitudes for a purpose undisclosed to the general public in clandestine programs directed by government officials'. Amazon says it has taken steps to fix the issue since the error was first discovered by Mashable. Amazon's Alexa voice assistant has been telling users that chemtrails are part of a government-issued conspiracy theory.
Little-known drug keeps climbers' minds sharp at high altitude
A so-called "smart drug" intended to boost cognitive performance also seems to protect the brain from altitude sickness, according to a military study that tested it at 4000 metres. An increasing number of people visit high-altitude sites nowadays, for work, sport, religious pilgrimages and military tasks. But even the fittest among us suffer in thin air: the lower oxygen content at altitude can lead to cognitive effects, including memory loss and attention difficulties. There is little you can do to prevent these symptoms other than acclimatise – but this takes time and doesn't always work. A drug called oxiracetam might be the answer.