• Student Housing no. 7 / Projekt Praga
    www.archdaily.com
    Student Housing no. 7 / Projekt PragaSave this picture! Nate Cook PhotographyArchitects: Projekt PragaPhotographsPhotographs:Nate Cook Photography, ONI studio More SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Text description provided by the architects. Redefining student living: Projekt Praga sets a new architectural standard for academic housing in Poland.For the first time in nearly 60 years, the University of Warsaw has introduced a new public dormitory, setting a fresh benchmark for student living in Poland. Functionality, accessibility, and community are the pillars of this project. "We designed a space where architecture is not just about form but, above all, about enhancing the quality of life for its residents," say the architects from Projekt Praga.Save this picture!A modern approach to student housingThe University of Warsaw's Student House No. 7 redefines student housing with its modern, functional, and community-driven design for 382 residents. Selected through an architectural competition organized by the Association of Polish Architects (SARP) and the University of Warsaw, the project aimed to seamlessly integrate into the existing campus garden in Suewiec while aligning with the university's long-term urban plan.Save this picture!Designed to evolve with the campus, the dormitory was envisioned as a standalone building that would later become part of a larger urban composition. Beyond functionality, the focus was on creating a welcoming, human-scale environment, ensuring that students feel at home despite the large scale of the development. By blending smart architecture with an emphasis on community and comfort, the newest Warsaw University Dormitory sets a new benchmark for public student housing in Poland.Save this picture!Rooted in community and functionality In the winning concept by Warsaw-based studio Projekt Praga, the dormitory reimagines traditional student housing with a four-winged structure and an "inverted" courtyard, moving away from conventional corridor-based layouts. Inspired by a windmill-like plan, the building is divided into four distinct wings, each designed as small, close-knit living communities. At its core lies a glass atrium, flooding the interiors with natural light and serving as a central gathering space.Save this picture!This human-centered design eliminates long, impersonal hallways, ensuring that students move effortlessly between shared spaces and their private neighborhood groups. The outside courtyards enhance privacy, preventing direct views into rooms, while also seamlessly connecting communal areas with the surrounding greenery.Save this picture!Designed with students, for studentsCovering nearly 10,300 m, the new dormitory features 138 residential units in a variety of layouts, primarily 2+2 and 1+1 double-room segments, alongside apartments for PhD students and professors. The building also includes 16 fully adapted rooms for students with disabilities.Save this picture!Save this picture!Its vision was developed at the stage of creating the competition guidelines in the University of Warsaw's Innovation Office for Academic Space (BIPA). Thanks to consultations with experts, representatives of the academic community, and students, the project was tailored to meet the real needs of its future residents. Insights from research on student interaction and community-building informed the decision to divide the interior into smaller, neighborhood-style groups of around 18 residents, fostering social connections while maintaining privacy.Save this picture!However, what really shapes the dormitory's character are its well-designed common spaces. "Our goal was to create as many opportunities for spontaneous interaction as possible," says Marcin Garbacki, architect at Projekt Praga. Each floor includes communal kitchens with dining areas and study rooms designed for both individual and group work. "We wanted to provide students with spaces where they can easily connect with others, while also having quiet areas to focus on their studies," adds architect Karolina Tunajek.Save this picture!The ground floor further enhances community life, featuring a laundry room, fitness area, and communal lounge, along with a service space envisioned for future amenities, such as a caf. Each of these areas accessible from both inside and outside the building is complemented by a thematic courtyard, reinforcing its function: At the main entrance an amphitheater-like gathering space with tiered seating on the garage ramp. Near the service area, laundry, and lounge a recreational terrace with a grill and a garden caf. By the fitness room a sports square with outdoor exercise equipment. Save this picture!Rather than dominating its surroundings, the building is designed to harmonize with the landscape, creating a welcoming, human-scaled environment that encourages both social interaction and personal well-being.Save this picture!Student housing that feels like homeThe interiors of Student Housing no. 7 strike a balance between simplicity and comfort, creating a space that feels just as natural for studying as it does for unwinding. A rust-orange color, used in furniture, railings, and architectural details, adds warmth to the clean, modern aesthetic, making the space feel both stylish and welcoming. Bright, open lounges with floor-to-ceiling windows overlook greenery, while cozy sofas, natural fabrics, and thoughtfully chosen decor make shared spaces feel more like a home than a typical dormitory. The industrial-style kitchens, featuring stainless steel countertops and bold orange shelving, invite students to cook, eat, and connect.Save this picture!Sustainability and accessibility at the coreThe University of Warsaw's new dormitory prioritizes accessibility and sustainability, ensuring a comfortable, inclusive, and eco-friendly living space for students. Step-free access, an intuitive layout, and clear navigation make movement effortless for all residents. Rooms adapted for students with disabilities are evenly distributed across floors, offering the freedom to choose their preferred location and fostering a fully integrated academic community.Save this picture!Built with energy efficiency in mind, the dormitory minimizes both environmental impact and operational costs. Windows in the hall area let in natural light, reducing the need for artificial illumination. Solar panels and a heat recovery system optimize energy use, while external blinds help regulate indoor temperatures. The landscape design preserves existing greenery and incorporates permeable surfaces, seamlessly blending the building into its natural surroundings.Save this picture!A new benchmark for public investment"Our goal was to set a new standard for public student housing," says Karolina Tunajek and the result is far more than just a place to sleep. The University of Warsaw's new dormitory is designed to foster community, support student adaptation, and strike a balance between privacy and social interaction. By blending small, close-knit living units with dynamic common spaces, it creates a comfortable, inspiring, and socially engaging environment that evolves with its residents. Projekt Praga has demonstrated that public-use buildings can be both architecturally outstanding and economically sustainable without massive budgets or private investment.Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessProject locationAddress:University of Warsaw, PolandLocation to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.About this officeProjekt PragaOfficeMaterialsGlassConcreteMaterials and TagsPublished on March 27, 2025Cite: "Student Housing no. 7 / Projekt Praga" 27 Mar 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1028386/student-housing-no-7-projekt-praga&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • 5 of the Longest Gestation Periods in the Animal Kingdom
    www.discovermagazine.com
    For humans, the gestation period can last forty weeks. There are cramps, morning sickness, strange food cravings, increasing discomfort, and a multitude of other effects. And the nine months of pregnancy is often just a prelude to the real drama. All this pain and suffering is for a good reason though.Scientists are still learning more about when live birth evolved, but one fossil discovery in the South China Sea revealed a 250 million-year-old creature with an embryo in its ribcage. The Dinocephalosaurus fossil was an archosauromorph, a group that includes dinosaurs and modern-day birds and crocodiles. Today, birds and crocodiles just lay eggs. But most mammals aside from the platypus and some snakes, lizards, fish, and amphibians give live birth.An examination of some of these species gestation periods reveals that human mothers dont necessarily have it the worst out there. Some sharks and even a salamander retain their fetuses for years sometimes before giving birth. So, what animal has the longest gestation period? Here are the 5 longest periods in the animal kingdom.(Image Credit: Matteo photos/Shutterstock)1. Golden Alpine Salamander Gestation Period: 3 Years Golden alpine salamanders live in cold climates in mountainous parts of Switzerland. They hold the Guinness World Record for the longest gestation period among amphibians. Mothers usually harbor their young for about three years before giving birth, though in some cases, post-term for these creatures can mean a whole extra year.The species adapted to give live birth during the Ices Ages, when warmer water to lay eggs wasnt as easy to come by, says Antonio Romero, a biologist with Italys National Research Council who studies the species.The long gestation and viviparity of [the alpine salamander] are closely linked to historical glaciations because these adaptations provided survival advantages in cold, harsh environments, Romero says. The cold also meant everything slowed down.Alpine salamanders evolved a multi-year gestation because slow metabolism reduces energy demands, making it possible to sustain developing embryos for years, he says.This doesnt always mean a relaxed, nurturing environment to develop though. Romero says that there are initially several embryos inside the mother, but some will consume the others for nutrition during gestation, leaving only one or two to fully develop. Other amphibians including fire salamanders, Lanzas alpine salamanders, hellbenders, Andersons salamanders and the olm can all have gestation periods longer than humans as well, depending on the weather, he says.(Image Credit: 3dsam79/Shutterstock)2. Frilled Shark Gestation Period: Almost 3 Years Several shark species have evolved to give live birth, and the gestation period of some of these can last exceptionally long. The frilled shark, also known as the lizard shark, has a gestation period of at least three years.With their many gill slits, strangely shaped mouth and eel-like shape, deep-sea sharks are something of a relic from a past era It is assumed to represent an ancient morphotype of sharks, stated Faviel Lpez-Romero and his coauthors in a study on the embryos of the species.But this research found that some of the strange looks of these sharks happen in the late stage of the embryonic development. The position of the jaws may not be leftover traits from a bygone era, but a more recent adaptation, evolutionarily speaking.This species isnt the only shark with long pregnancies. The spiny dogfishs gestation period lasts about two years.(Image Credit: Wirestock Creators/Shutterstock)3. Elephant Gestation Period: 22 Months Elephants may be the champion mothers of the land-walking mammals. Elephant embryos gestate for 22 months, time enough to help them grow into young giants elephants weigh around 240 pounds at birth. It also gives them a head start in the brains department, as elephant newborns have relatively good cognitive skills.This long gestation period may happen in elephants because they have something that other mammals lack. All mammals have a corpus luteum, a temporary gland that remains after an egg follicle is released during menstrual cycles. These glands stick around for a while during pregnancy, releasing important hormones that help the embryo develop. While most mammals only have one of these open at a time, elephants can have as many as 12 open during their pregnancies, according to research published in Biological Sciences.They increase in size as the embryo develops, after a slow beginning. Our findings demonstrate a highly successful reproductive solution, different from currently described mammalian models, the authors of the study stated.(Image Credit: Hugh Harrop/Shutterstock)4. Orca Gestation Period: 15-16 MonthsMany of the other long-gestating mammals are marine-based rather than land-based. Walruses gestate for 15 months to 16 months, while several species of whales have pregnancies that last more than a year. Orcas are among the longest carrying whale mothers, with gestation periods that last around 17 months to 18 months.In terms of weight, orcas get more done than elephants in a shorter time, producing calves that weigh about 400 pounds. This long gestation makes for a lot of time for things to go wrong, at least in some orca populations.Hormone work has revealed that more than two-thirds of southern resident orca pregnancies in the Pacific Northwest fail many late in gestation or right after birth though this may be due in part to food stress because of drops in the salmon population.(Image Credit: Maulina Riski/Shutterstock)5. Lizard and Snake Gestation Periods: 12 MonthsMost snakes dont have long gestation periods, but northern copperheads can be pregnant for up to nine months, and could give birth to up to 10 offspring. Some species of lizards, on the other hand, can go a little longer.The Mabuya skink of Brazil, for example, can gestate for up to 12 months. Females carry between two and nine embryos. Other skinks may also have similarly long pregnancies, but the stumpy-tailed lizard in Australia may have one of the most uncomfortable pregnancies. Their embryos grow until they are about a third the size of their mothers roughly like human mothers giving birth to a six-year-old.Article SourcesOur writers at Discovermagazine.com use peer-reviewed studies and high-quality sources for our articles, and our editors review for scientific accuracy and editorial standards. Review the sources used below for this article:Genome Biology and Evolution. Inside the Shark Nursery: The Evolution of Live Birth in Cartilaginous Fish Monterey Bay Aquarium. Pacific spiny dogfishCenter for Whale Research. Killer whale reproductionScience News. Mysteries Of The Stumpy Lizard RevealedJoshua Rapp Learn is an award-winning D.C.-based science writer. An expat Albertan, he contributes to a number of science publications like National Geographic, The New York Times, The Guardian, New Scientist, Hakai, and others.
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  • Why are cars bigger in the U.S.? Its not just cheap gas.
    www.popsci.com
    Image: Dave and Les Jacobs/Blend Images/Getty Images Americans, as you may have noticed, like to supersize things. Soda cans are bigger here, and so are hotel rooms, houses, and cars. Here in the U.S., giant pickup trucks and SUVs are the norm; visit any school at pickup time and youre likely to see Chevrolet Tahoes, Jeep Grand Wagoneers, and Ford Expeditions in the carpool line. It would be easy to pick on the GMC Hummer EV because its massive; the battery alone is as heavy as a Honda Civic. But the Hummer EV is such a blast to drive that it gets a pass.Per a report from the EPA, the average vehicle footprint expanded by six percent between 2008 and 2023, a historic high. James Jenkins, department head of Product Planning for Honda and Acura vehicles at American Honda, says customers in America want more space for their things so the brand wants to provide that.Larger cars, like the Accord, are more comfortable to drive on long trips with the longer wheelbases, which lends itself to the driving habits in the U.S., Jenkins says.Fords best-selling vehicle in the United States is its ubiquitous F-150 pickup. Image: Kristin Shaw/Popular Science Bigger roads and cheaper fuelThere are two main reasons why vehicles are bigger in the U.S., says Ed Kim, the president of automotive marketing research AutoPacific. Ultimately, it comes down to the price of fuel, he says. Sure, we Americans complain about the price of gasoline, but the reality is that gasoline is taxed far less than almost any other country in the world.In other words, he explains, cheap fuel allows Americans to drive far larger vehicles and less fuel-efficient vehicles compared to drivers in most other parts of the world. According to business forecasting site Kiplinger, a gallon of gas cost $3.75 last summer in the U.S. Compare that to the cost per gallon in the UK ($6.98), Singapore ($7.64) or Hong Kong (a whopping $12.16!).Related, American roads are designed to accommodate the larger vehicles we have due to the cheaper fuel weve historically had. Streets are wide, and even most parking spaces are sized to accommodate larger vehicles.Europe was developed before America, its cobbled streets designed for pedestrians and horses. If youve never traveled along a narrow road in Portugal in a Range Rover SV, which is 6-feet, 8-inches wide without the mirrors, I can promise you the walls feel very close. Thats a major reason why cars in countries like France, Spain, and Italy are so small; its much less stressful to pilot a Volkswagen Polo or Dacia Sandero through tight roads that would generously be called alleys in the U.S.As automakers develop more fuel-efficient hybrids and EVs, size matters less than ever.Were at a stage where you can get bigger products with little impact to fuel economy, Jenkins agrees.Last years EPA report showed promise for the environmental future as new technologies for reducing emissions comes to light: Preliminary data suggest that the average new vehicle CO2 emission rate and fuel economy will continue to improve in model year 2024, the report reads, and that the impact of BEVs and PHEVs will continue to grow.The perception of safetyIve heard more parents say they want their new teen driver to have a big SUV or truck because its safer in a crash. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety backs up that notion, stating that a bigger, heavier vehicle provides better crash protection than a smaller, lighter one (assuming no other differences between them). The area of the car between the front bumper and the cabin is designed to absorb energy from crashes by crumpling. Longer front ends offer better protection in frontal crashes, and, the IIHS says, heavier vehicles also tend to continue moving forward in crashes with lighter vehicles and other obstacles, so passengers are subject to less force.Large vehicles arent as big a threat to people in small vehicles as they used to be, says the IIHS. A lighter vehicle will always be at a disadvantage in a collision with a heavier vehicle. But in recent years automakers have reduced the threat that SUVs and pickups pose by lowering their energy-absorbing structures so that they line up with those in cars.In Europe, cars are more likely to be the size of a Renault Clio.Image: Kristin Shaw/Popular Science It becomes a cycle: as more people buy larger cars, the tendency to want to match the size increases. Thats especially true in suburban areas (thus, the big Chevy Suburban SUV in neighborhoods all over America), where theres more space and bigger driveways.Companies like Telo are making small, city-sized electric trucks to fill the niche demand in the U.S. for those who want something a little cozier.This story is part of Popular SciencesAsk Us Anything series, where we answer your most outlandish, mind-burning questions, from the ordinary to the off-the-wall. Have something youve always wanted to know?Ask us.
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  • Calls to restart nuclear weapons tests stir dismay and debate among scientists
    www.sciencenews.org
    When the countdown hit zero on September 23, 1992, the desert surface puffed up into the air, as if a giant balloon had inflated it from below.It wasnt a balloon. Scientists had exploded a nuclear device hundreds of meters below the Nevada desert, equivalent to thousands of tons of TNT. The ensuing fireball reached pressures and temperatures well beyond those in Earths core. Within milliseconds of the detonation, shock waves rammed outward. The rock melted, vaporized and fractured, leaving behind a cavity oozing with liquid radioactive rock that puddled on the cavitys floor.As the temperature and pressure abated, rocks collapsed into the cavity. The desert surface slumped, forming a subsidence crater about 3 meters deep and wider than the length of a football field. Unknown to the scientists working on this test, named Divider, it would be the end of the line. Soon after, the United States halted nuclear testing.Beginning with the first explosive test, known as Trinity, in 1945, more than 2,000 atomic blasts have rattled the globe. Today, that nuclear din has been largely silenced, thanks to the norms set by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, or CTBT, negotiated in the mid-1990s.Only one nation North Korea has conducted a nuclear test this century. But researchers and policy makers are increasingly grappling with the possibility that the fragile quiet will soon be shattered.Some in the United States have called for resuming testing, including a former national security adviser to President Donald Trump. Officials in the previous Trump administration considered testing, according to a 2020 Washington Post article. And there may be temptation in coming years. The United States is in the midst of a sweeping, decades-long overhaul of its aging nuclear arsenal. Tests could confirm that old weapons still work, check that updated weapons perform as expected or help develop new types of weapons.Meanwhile, the two major nuclear powers, the United States and Russia, remain ready to obliterate one another at a moments notice. If tensions escalate, a test could serve as a signal of willingness to use the weapons.Testing has tremendous symbolic importance, says Frank von Hippel, a physicist at Princeton University. During the Cold War, when we were shooting these things off all the time, it was like war drums: We have nuclear weapons and they work. Better watch out. The cessation of testing, he says, was an acknowledgment that these [weapons] are so unusable that we dont even test them.Many scientists maintain that tests are unnecessary. What weve been saying consistently now for decades is theres no scientific reason that we need to test, says Jill Hruby, who was the administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration, or NNSA, during the Biden administration.Thats because the Nevada site, where nuclear explosions once thundered regularly, hasnt been mothballed entirely. There, in an underground lab, scientists are performing nuclear experiments that are subcritical, meaning they dont kick off the self-sustaining chains of reactions that define a nuclear blast.Workers prepare the diagnostics rack to monitor the underground explosion for the last U.S. nuclear test, called Divider, in the Nevada desert in 1992.Courtesy of Los Alamos National LaboratoryMany scientists argue that subcritical experiments, coupled with computer simulations using the most powerful supercomputers on the planet, provide all the information needed to assess and modernize the weapons. Subcritical experiments, some argue, are even superior to traditional testing for investigating some lingering scientific puzzles about the weapons, such as how they age.Others think that subcritical experiments and simulations, no matter how sophisticated, cant replace the real thing indefinitely. But so far, the experiments and detailed assessments of the stockpile have backed up the capabilities of the nuclear arsenal. And those experiments avoid the big drawbacks of tests.Sponsor MessageA single United States test could trigger a global chain reaction, says geologist Sulgiye Park of the Union of Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit advocacy group. Other nuclear powers would likely follow by setting off their own test blasts. Countries without nuclear weapons might be spurred to develop and test them. One test could kick off a free-for-all.Its like striking a match in a roomful of dynamite, Park says.The rising nuclear threatThe logic behind nuclear weapons involves mental gymnastics. The weapons can annihilate entire cities with one strike, yet their existence is touted as a force for peace. The thinking is that nuclear weapons act as a deterrent other countries will resist using a nuclear weapon, or making any major attack, in fear of retaliation. The idea is so embedded in U.S. military circles that a type of intercontinental ballistic missile developed during the Cold War was dubbed Peacekeeper.Since the end of testing, the world seems to have taken a slow, calming exhale. Global nuclear weapons tallies shrunk from more than 70,000 in the mid-1980s to just over 12,000 today. That pullback was due to a series of treaties between the United States and Russia (previously the Soviet Union). Nuclear weapons largely fell from the forefront of public consciousness.Since the first nuclear weapons test in 1945, there have been more than 2,000 tests. In the 1960s, countries began performing tests underground over fears of radioactive fallout. In the 1990s, nuclear testing largely ended with the arrival of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty. The only country to test nuclear weapons in the 21st century is North Korea. Its last known test was in 2017.But now theres been a sharp inhale. The last remaining arms-control treaty between the United States and Russia, New START, is set to expire in 2026, giving the countries free rein on numbers of deployed weapons. Russia already suspended its participation in New START in 2023 and revoked its ratification of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty to mirror the United States and a handful of other countries that signed but never ratified the treaty. (The holdouts prevented the treaty from officially coming into force, but nations have abided by it anyway.)Nuclear threats by Russia have been a regular occurrence during the ongoing war in Ukraine. And China, with the third-largest stockpile, is rapidly expanding its cache, highlighting a potential future in which there are three main nuclear powers, not just two.There is this increasing perception that this is a uniquely dangerous moment. Were in this regime where all the controls are coming off and things are very unstable, says Daniel Holz, a physicist at the University of Chicago and chair of the Science and Security Board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a nonprofit that aims to raise awareness of the peril of nuclear weapons and other threats. In January, the group set its metaphorical Doomsday Clock at 89 seconds to midnight the closest it has ever been.Some see the ability to test as a necessity for a world in which nuclear weapons are a rising threat. We are seeing an environment in which the autocrats are increasingly relying on nuclear weapons to threaten and coerce their adversaries, says Robert Peters, a research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. If youre in an acute crisis or conflict in which your adversary is threatening to employ nuclear weapons, you dont want to limit the options of the president to get you out of that crisis. Testing, and the signal it sends to an adversary, he argues, should be such an option.Peters advocates for shortening the time window for test preparations currently estimated at two or three years to three to six months. The Heritage Foundations Project 2025 calls for immediate test readiness.The United States regularly considers the possibility of testing nuclear weapons. Its a question that actually gets asked every year, says Thom Mason, director of Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. Los Alamos is one of the three U.S. nuclear weapons labs, alongside Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California and Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque. Each year, the directors of the three labs coordinate detailed assessments of the stockpiles status, including whether tests are needed.Up until this point, the answer has been no, Mason says. But if scientific concerns arose that couldnt be resolved otherwise or if weapons began unexpectedly deteriorating, that assessment could change.If a test were deemed necessary, exactly how long it would take to prepare would depend on the reasons for it. If youre trying to answer a scientific question, then you probably need lots of instrumentation and that could take time, Mason says. If youre just trying to send a signal, then maybe you dont need as much of that; youre just trying to make the ground shake.Studying nuclear weapons without testingThe area of the Nevada desert encompassing the test site is speckled with otherworldly Joshua trees and the saucer-shaped craters of past tests. In addition to 828 underground tests, 100atmospheric tests were performed there, part of whats now known as the Nevada National Security Sites. Carved out of Western Shoshone lands, it sits 120 kilometers from Las Vegas. Radioactive fallout from atmospheric tests, which ceased in 1962, reached nearby Indian reservations and other communities a matter that is still the subject of litigation.By moving tests underground, officials aimed to contain the nuclear fallout and limit its impact on human health. Before an underground test, workers outfitted a nuclear device with scientific instruments and lowered it into a hole drilled a few hundred meters into the earth. The hole was then filled with sand, gravel and other materials.As personnel watched a video feed from the safety of a bunker, the device was detonated. You see the ground pop, and you see the dust come up and then slowly settle back down. And then eventually you see the subsidence crater form. It just falls in on itself, says Marvin Adams, a nuclear engineer who was deputy administrator for NNSAs Defense Programs during the Biden administration. There was always a betting pool on how long that would take before the crater formed. And it could be seconds, or it could be days.Kilometers worth of cables fed information from the equipment to trailers where data were recorded. Meanwhile, stations monitored seismic signals and radioactivity. Later, another hole would be drilled down into the cavity and rock samples taken to determine the explosions yield.Today, such scenes have gone the way of the 90s hairstyles worn in photos of underground test preparation. Theyve been replaced by subcritical experiments, which use chemical explosives to implode or shock plutonium, the fuel at the heart of U.S. weapons, in a facility called the Principal Underground Laboratory for Subcritical Experimentation, PULSE.The experiments mimic what goes on in a real weapon but with one big difference. Weapons are supercritical: The plutonium is compressed enough to sustain chains of nuclear fission reactions, the splitting of atomic nuclei. The chain reactions occur because fission spits out neutrons that, in a supercritical configuration, can initiate further fissions, which release more neutrons, and so on. A subcritical experiment doesnt smoosh the plutonium enough to beget those fissions upon fissions that lead to a nuclear explosion.The PULSE facility consists of 2.3 kilometers of tunnels nearly 300 meters below the surface. There, a machine called Cygnus takes X-ray images of the roiling plutonium when its blasted with chemical explosives in subcritical experiments. X-rays pass through the plutonium and are detected on the other side. Just as a dentist uses an X-ray machine to see inside your mouth, the X-rays illuminate whats happening inside the experiment.Glimpses of such experiments are rare. A video of a 2012 subcritical experimentshows a dimly lit close-up of the confinement vessel that encloses the experiment over audio of a countdown and a piercing beeping noise, irritating enough that it must be signifying something important is about to happen. When the countdown ends, theres a bang, and the beeping stops. Thats it. Its a far cry from the mushroom clouds of yesteryear.This video shows a 2012 subcritical experiment at the PULSE facility in Nevada.The experiments are a component of the U.S.stockpile stewardship program, which ensures the weapons status via a variety of assessments, experiments and computer simulations. PULSE is now being expanded to beef up its capabilities. A new machine called Scorpius is planned to begin operating in 2033. It will feature a 125-meter-long particle accelerator that will blast electrons into a target to generate X-rays that are more intense and energetic than Cygnus, which will allow scientists to take images later in the implosion. Whats more, Scorpius will produce four snapshots at different times, revealing how the plutonium changes throughout the experiment.And the upcoming ZEUS, the Z-Pinched Experimental Underground System, will blast subcritical experiments with neutrons and measure the release of gamma rays, a type of high-energy radiation. ZEUS will be the first experiment of its kind to study plutonium.Subcritical experiments help validate computer simulations of nuclear weapons. Those simulations then inform the maintenance and development of the real thing. The El Capitan computer, installed for this purpose at Lawrence Livermore in 2024, is the fastest supercomputer ever reported.That synergy between powerful computing and advanced experiments is necessary to grapple with the full complexity of modern nuclear weapons, in which materials are subject to some of the most extreme conditions known on Earth and evolve dramatically over mere instants.To maximize the energy released, modern weapons dont stop with fission. They employ a complex interplay between fission and fusion, the merging of atomic nuclei. First, explosives implode the plutonium, which is contained in a hollow sphere called a pit. This allows fission reactions to proliferate. The extreme temperatures and pressures generated by fission kick off fusion reactions in hydrogen contained inside the pit, blasting out neutrons that initiate additional fission. X-rays released by that first stage compress a second stage, generating additional fission and fusion reactions that likewise feed off one another. These principles have produced weapons 1,000 times as powerful as the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.To mesh simulations and experiments, scientists must understand their measurements in detail and carefully quantify the uncertainties involved. This kind of deep understanding wasnt as necessary, or even possible, in the days of explosive nuclear weapons test, says geophysicist Raymond Jeanloz of the University of California, Berkeley. Its actually very hard to use nuclear explosion testing to falsify hypotheses. Theyre designed mostly to reassure everyone that, after you put everything together and do it, that it works.Laboratory experiments can be done repeatedly, with parameters slightly changed. They can be designed to fail, helping delineate the border between success and failure. Nuclear explosive tests, because they were expensive, laborious one-offs, were designed to succeed.Stockpile stewardship has allowed scientists to learn the ins and outs of the physics behind the weapons. We pay attention to every last detail, Hruby says. Through the science program, we now better understand nuclear weapons than we ever understood them before.For example, Jeanloz says, in the era of testing, a quantity called the energy balance wasnt fully understood. It describes how much energy gets transferred from the primary to the secondary component in a weapon. In the past, that lack of understanding could be swept aside, because a test could confirm that the weapons worked. But with subcritical experiments and simulations, fudge factors must be eliminated to be certain a weapon will function. Quantifying that energy balance and determining the uncertainty was a victory of stockpile stewardship.This type of work, Jeanloz says, brought the heart and soul, the guts of the scientific process into the [nuclear] enterprise.Is there a need to test nuclear weapons?Subcritical experiments are focused in particular on the quandary over how plutonium ages. Since 1989, the United States hasnt fabricated significant numbers of plutonium pits. That means the pits in the U.S. arsenal are decades old, raising questions about whether weapons will still work.An aging pit, some scientists worry, might cause the multistep process in a nuclear warhead to fizzle. For example, if the implosion in the first stage doesnt proceed properly, the second stage might not go off at all.Craters mark where nuclear devices were detonated underground at the Nevada National Security Sites.Karen Kasmauski/Corbis Documentary/Getty Images PlusPlutonium ages not only from the outside in akin to rusting iron but also from the inside out, says Siegfried Hecker, who was director of Los Alamos from 1986 to 1997. Its constantly bombarding itself by radioactive decay. And that destroys the metallic lattice, the crystal structure of plutonium.The decay leaves behind a helium nucleus, which over time may result in tiny bubbles of helium throughout the lattice of plutonium atoms. Each decay also produces a uranium atom that zings through the material and beats the daylights out of the lattice, Hecker says. We dont quite know how much the damage is and how that damaged material will behave under the shock and temperature conditions of a nuclear weapon. Thats the tricky part.One way to circumvent this issue is to produce new pits. A major effort under way will ramp up production. In 2024, the NNSA diamond stamped the first of these pits, meaning that the pit was certified for use in a weapon. The aim is for the United States to make 80 pits per year by 2030. But questions remain about new plutonium pits as well, Hecker says, as they rely on an updated manufacturing process.Hecker, whose tenure at Los Alamos straddled the testing and post-testing eras, thinks nuclear tests could help answer some of those questions. Those people who say, There is no scientific or technical reason to test. We can do it all with computers, I disagree strongly.But, he says, the benefits of performing a test would be outweighed by the big drawback: Other countries would likely return to testing. And those countries would have more to learn than the United States. China, for instance, has performed only 45 tests, while the United States has performed over 1,000. We have to find other ways that we can reassure ourselves, Hecker says.Other experts similarly thread the needle. Nuclear tests of the past produced plenty of surprises, such as yields that were higher or lower than predicted, physicist Michael Frankel, an independent scientific consultant, and colleagues argued in a 2021 report. While the researchers advise against resuming testing in the current situation, they expect that stockpile stewardship will not be sufficient indefinitely. Too many things have gone too wrong too often to trust Lucy with the football one more time, Frankel and colleagues wrote, referring to Charles Schulzs comic strip Peanuts. If we rely too much on computer simulations to conclude an untested nuclear weapon will work, we might find ourselves like Charlie Brown flat on our backs.But other scientists have full faith in subcritical experiments and stockpile stewardship. We have always found that there are better ways to answer these questions than to return to nuclear explosive testing, Adams says.What counts as a nuclear weapons test?For many scientists, subcritical experiments are preferable, especially given the political ramifications of full-fledged tests. But the line between a nuclear test prohibited by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty and an experiment that is allowed is not always clear.The CTBT is a zero yield treaty; experiments can release no energy beyond that produced by the chemical explosives. But, Adams says, theres no such thing as zero yield. Even in an idle, isolated hunk of plutonium, some nuclear fission happens spontaneously. Thats a nonzero but tiny nuclear yield. Its a ridiculous term, he says. I hate it. I wish no one had ever said it.The United States has taken zero yield to mean that self-sustaining chain reactions are prohibited. U.S. government reports claim that Russia has performed nuclear experiments that surpass this definition of the zero yield benchmark and raise concerns about Chinas adherence to the standard. The confusion has caused finger-pointing and increased tensions.But countries might honestly disagree on the definition of a nuclear test, Adams says. For example, a country might allow hydronuclear experiments, which are supercritical but the amount of fission energy released is dwarfed by the energy from the chemical explosive. Such experiments would violate U.S. standards, but perhaps not those of Russia or another country.Even if everyone could agree on a definition, monitoring would be challenging. The CTBT provides for seismic and other monitoring, but detecting very-low-yield tests would demand new inspection techniques, such as measuring the radiation emanating from a confinement vessel used in an experiment.Underground tests are not risk-freeTests that clearly break the rules, however, can be swiftly detected. The CTBT monitoring system can spot underground explosions as small as 0.1 kilotons, less than a hundredth that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima. That includes the most recent nuclear explosive test, performed by North Korea in 2017.Despite being invisible, underground nuclear explosive tests have an impact. While an underground test is generally much safer than an open-air nuclear test, its not not risky, Park says.Underground nuclear tests can accidentally release radioactive fallout, as in the 1970 Baneberry test (shown) in Nevada.Courtesy of the National Nuclear Security AdministrationThe containment provided by an underground test isnt assured. In the 1970 Baneberry test in Nevada, a misunderstanding of the sites geology led to a radioactive plume escaping in a blowout that exposed workers on the site.While U.S. scientists learned from that mistake and havent had such a major containment failure since, the incident suggests that performing an underground test in a rushed manner could increase the risks for an accident, Park says.Hecker is not too concerned about that possibility. For the most part, I have good confidence that we could do underground nuclear testing without a significant insult to the environment, he says. Its not an automatic given. Obviously theres radioactive debris that stays down there. But I think enough work has been done to understand the geology that we dont think there will be a major environmental problem.While the United States knows its test sites well and has practice with underground testing, other countries might not be as knowledgeable, Hruby says. So if the United States starts testing and others follow, the chance of a non-containment, a leak of some kind, certainly goes up. A U.S. test, she says, is a very bad idea.Even if the initial containment is successful, radioactive materials could travel via groundwater. Although tests are designed to avoid groundwater, scientists have detected traces of plutonium in groundwater from the Nevada site. The plutonium traveled a little more than a kilometer in 30 years. To a lot of people, thats not very far, Park says. But from a geology time scale, thats really fast. Although not at a level where it would cause health effects, the plutonium had been expected to stay put.The craters left in the Nevada desert are a mark of each tests impact on structures deep below the surface. There was a time when detonating either above ground or underground in the desert seemed like well, thats just wasteland, Jeanloz says. Many would view it very differently now, and say, No, these are very fragile ecosystems, so perturbing the water table, putting radioactive debris, has serious consequences. The weight of public opinion is another hurdle. In the days of nuclear testing, protests at the site were a regular occurrence. That opposition persisted to the very end. On the day of the Divider test in 1992, four protesters made it to within about six kilometers of ground zero before being arrested.The disarmament movement continues despite the lack of testing. At a recent meeting of nuclear experts, the Nuclear Deterrence Summit in Arlington, Va., a few protesters gathered outside in the January cold, demanding that the United States and Russia swear off nuclear weapons for good. But that option was not on the meetings agenda. During a break between sessions, the song that played presumably unintentionally was Never Gonna Give You Up.
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  • 75% of US scientists who answered <i>Nature</i> poll consider leaving
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    Nature, Published online: 27 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00938-yMore than 1,600 readers answered our poll; many said they were looking for jobs in Europe and Canada.
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    Nature, Published online: 27 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00930-6Many firms are misusing the open source label. The scientific community, which relies on transparency and replicability, must resist this trend.
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  • James Webb telescope captures auroras on Neptune for first time ever
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    The James Webb Space Telescope detected infrared auroras on Neptune for the first time. The auroras are shown in cyan in this enhanced-color image.(Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Heidi Hammel (AURA), Henrik Melin (Northumbria University), Leigh Fletcher (University of Leicester), Stefanie Milam (NASA-GSFC))New James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) images have captured auroras on Neptune for the first time.The telescope spotted infrared auroras that create exotic molecules known as trihydrogen cations, according to a study published March 26 in Nature. Scientists identified auroras on Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus more than 30 years ago, but Neptune's auroras staunchly evaded detection until now.Auroras form when energetic, charged particles from the sun get caught up in a planet's magnetic field. The field funnels the particles toward the planet's magnetic poles, where they collide with and ionize atmospheric molecules along the way, causing them to glow.Unlike auroras on Earth, which occur at extreme northern and southern latitudes near our planet's North and South Pole, Neptune's auroras appear near the planet's mid-latitudes. That's because Neptune's magnetic field is tilted 47 degrees off its rotational axis, so the planet's magnetic poles lie between the geographic poles and the equator around where South America would be located on Earth.And unlike the Northern Lights, Neptune's auroras aren't visible to the naked eye."Turns out, actually imaging the auroral activity on Neptune was only possible with Webb's near-infrared sensitivity," Henrik Melin, a planetary scientist at Northumbria University in the U.K., said in a statement. "It was so stunning to not just see the auroras, but the detail and clarity of the signature really shocked me."Finishing Voyager's workIn June 2023, researchers used JWST's Near-Infrared Spectrograph to look for the trihydrogen cation (H3+), a hallmark of auroral activity in the hydrogen-rich atmospheres of the solar system's gas giants. NASA's Voyager 2 probe flew by Neptune in 1989, but it didn't have the right equipment to detect the cation. Since then, scientists at ground-based facilities, such as Hawaii's Keck telescope and NASA Infrared Telescope Facility, have looked for this molecule in Neptune's atmosphere without success, despite predictions that it should be present.Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter nowGet the worlds most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.This time, JWST detected H3+, but researchers also noted unexpected changes in Neptune's atmosphere. "I was astonished Neptune's upper atmosphere has cooled by several hundreds of degrees [since the Voyager flyby]," Melin said in the statement. "In fact, the temperature in 2023 was just over half of that in 1989."RELATED STORIESThese cold temperatures could be why scientists haven't detected H3+ on Neptune until now. The auroras appear much fainter at cold temperatures, and light reflecting off Neptune's clouds may have drowned them out, the researchers said."As we look ahead and dream of future missions to Uranus and Neptune, we now know how important it will be to have instruments tuned to the wavelengths of infrared light to continue to study the auroras," study coauthor Leigh Fletcher, a planetary scientist at Leicester University in the U.K., said in the statement. "This observatory has finally opened the window onto this last, previously hidden ionosphere of the giant planets."
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  • Current AI models a 'dead end' for human-level intelligence, scientists agree
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    In a new survey, 76% of scientists said that scaling large language models was "unlikely" or "very unlikely" to achieve AGI.
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  • When you want lots of fire in your scene but also don't want to destroy your computer
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    Dw this is not a meme submitted by /u/Successful_Sink_1936 [link] [comments]
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  • Create a realistic sci-fi 3D city with this comprehensive course, Realistic Sci-Fi City Creation: ORIS CITY, by Senior Generalist Artist Darko Mitev. ...
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    Create a realistic sci-fi 3D city with this comprehensive course, Realistic Sci-Fi City Creation: ORIS CITY, by Senior Generalist Artist Darko Mitev.The tutorial will guide you throughout the entire pipeline using Maya, ZBrush, Substance 3D Painter, Marvelous Designer, Nuke, and Photoshop: https://80.lv/articles/create-a-realistic-sci-fi-city-using-maya-with-this-course/#sponsored #ad
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