European innovation and industry have been in the doldrums lately, and the political whims of the moment do not bode well for the coming years. And, although part of this can be read between the lines in this text by Daniel Marín, it is still interesting to see how things are moving. The only thing missing is environmental groups warning about the net carbon emissions of these launchers. The future European methane launchers: Maia and Vega Next
You may have read about this everywhere a few weeks ago. What you may not have seen is an explanation in conditions like this that Lluis Montoliu offers us in Transparent Mice with Doritos.
There are three institutions related to the Nobel surname. The foundation that gives the Nobel Prizes, the magazine that gives the IgNobel Prizes, and Francisco R. Villatoro, whose articles on the prizes make it an institution in itself: here about the Ig Nobel Prizes 2024
They are also very interesting:
Was the ancient Martian atmosphere trapped in the clays of the red planet?
What if the dinosaurs had not become extinct?
COSINE-100 discards the annual DAMA/LIBRA modulation to more than 3 sigma
A Hispanic town in Pompeii: who were the Autrigones?
A planet around Barnard’s star: is the second time the charm?
Wormholes: bridges between science and fiction
Micromotors driven by polarized light thanks to metasurfaces
Some rings for planet Earth
The problematic second launch of the Vulcan rocket
Fibonacci is everywhere (I)
NA62 (CERN) observes K⁺ → π⁺νν decay at more than five sigma
The Solar System as a detector of primordial black holes
The Euro-Soyuz: the European manned spacecraft that never was
The impact of IBM’s 100,000-qubit quantum computer
Chemical. I work at Euskampus Fundazioa with the Chair of Scientific Culture of the UPV/EHU, for which I edit the Notebook of Scientific Culture and Mapping Ignorance. I write things for the Donostia International Physics Center and the Basque Center for Applied Mathematics.
#Network #milestones #Naukas