• Nepal School Project: Designing for Resilience
    worldarchitecture.org
    Submitted by WA ContentsNepal School Project: Designing for ResilienceNepal Architecture News - Feb 28, 2025 - 13:05 html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd"Archstorming launches an international competition to design resilient schools after natural disasters in Nepal.In 2024, Nepal experienced one of the most devastating monsoon seasons in its history. The catastrophic torrential rains caused severe floods and landslides, destroying numerous homes, infrastructure, and over 140 schools, leaving thousands of children without a safe place to study.Their consequences have been almost as devastating as the 2015 earthquake, yet they have gone largely unnoticed, and the international response has been much weaker. It is time to support Nepal once again, helping children in vulnerable communities secure a better future.That is why Archstorming, in collaboration with Karmayog Foundation and Nepal Rising, has launched the humanitarian competition Nepal School Project: Designing for Resilience, inviting architects and students from around the world to design an ecological, replicable, and earthquake-resistant school prototype.The challenge is to develop a model adaptable to various rural locations in the country, using sustainable materials and safe construction solutions against future disasters. These schools will not only ensure educational continuity but also serve as community shelters in emergencies.Awards1st Prize: 6,000 + Project Construction2nd Prize: 2,0003rd Prize: 1,0002 Special Mentions of 500 each10 Honorable MentionsWinning and finalist projects will be published in architectural magazines, blogs, and social media, as well as on the competition's official website. Additionally, all participants will receive a digital certificate of participation.Jury membersSaurav Rimal Founder and President of Karmayog Foundation.Arati Maleku Co-Founder and President of Nepal Rising; Associate Professor at The Ohio State University.Paz Braga Founder of Paz Braga; Architect specializing in sustainable design and rehabilitation projects.Takehiko Suzuki Founder of Takehiko Suzuki Architects; Co-founder of Architecture for the Masses.Filippo Berardi and Lucia Miglio Founders of Studio Berardi Miglio; Architects and designers specializing in humanitarian architecture.Joo Boto Co-founder of ROOTSTUDIO and the Adobe for Women Association; Architect focused on socially responsible and sustainable projects.Riha Sharma Founder of Design Doctor; Interior Architect and contributor to curriculum development for furniture design at the Council for Technical Education and Vocational Training (CTEVT) in Nepal.CalendarEarly registration: February 6 March 5Regular registration: March 6 April 2Advanced registration: April 3 April 30Last call registration: May 1 May 28Submission deadline: May 28Winners announcement: June 11Registrations are now open. If you believe architecture can change lives, find out more and participate at the website.Download the competition brief here: BRIEFING NSP_EN.pdf.Top image courtesy of Archstorming.> via Nepal School Project
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  • MPs sceptical that private investors will back 6bn HS2 Euston scheme
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    A parliamentary watchdog committee has expressed doubts about the governments ability to build its planned Euston terminus for HS2 using private money.The public accounts committee (PAC), made up of backbench MPs, published a major review of the delivery of the HS2 project today, which criricised the Department for Transport and its delivery body for presiding over a casebook example of how not to run a major project.Source: ShutterstockRepeated cost increases and delays over recent years have resulted in the scope of the high-speed rail project being slashed, with northern legs cut and the Euston terminus thrown into uncertainty.The new Labour government confirmed in the autumn Budget that the rail scheme would end in central London, but insisted, like its predecessor, that the scheme at Euston must be substantively funded by private finance.The PACs report said it was unclear how achievable this goal would be, given the approximate 6bn cost of the project.We are sceptical that the private sector will provide this level of contribution, the report said.According to the departments testimony during the committees inquiry, funding for Euston would be a mix of four components: private financing of the HS2 station; development receipts from commercial development; tax increment finance or contributions from local government; and some residual public funding.The department said that, once decisions are taken on the delivery model and spatial allocation, and the detailed design of the station has begun, there will be a better understanding of the potential commercial return and likely level of private investment, the report said.The department expects to progress with the delivery model and the establishment of a delivery company for the Euston project over the next year.It has also committed to creating a development corporation, focused on the wider regeneration of the area, and is currently considering two models for this. One would be mayoral-led and the other led by Camden council.>> Read more:HS2 submits revised designs for Grimshaws Curzon Street station>> Read more:Governments top infrastructure advisor never been convinced by HS2 governance structureThe report had harsh words for the management of the HS2 scheme as a whole, and expressed reservations about the way it was still being handled.It said that the department and HS2s continued disagreement on how much it will cost to complete phase 1 starkly illustrated their failure to work together.In November 2023, the department estimated the schemes cost at between 45bn and 54bn, while HS2 Ltds estimate in June 2024 was between 54bn and 66bn.Both of these estimates are in 2019 prices, meaning the figure could be closer to 80bn.Neither DfT nor HS2 Ltd currently have the skills or capabilities to make a success of the programmePublic accounts committeeThe PAC said the failure of the programme was now a reputational risk to the UK and urged the government to explain before the summer what value taxpayers can expect from the huge public investment in the project.Its report found that neither DfT nor HS2 Ltd currently have the skills or capabilities to make a success of the programme and the committee was not convinced that DfT has sufficiently considered how it can bring fresh thinking to its own leadership of HS2.Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, chair of the committee, said HS2 was now a cautionary tale that should be studied by future governments.It is ultimately the Department for Transport that has failed to manage this enormous project and manage HS2 properly, he said.[New chief executive Mark Wild] is taking decisive action to get the project back on track at the lowest feasible costHS2 Ltd spokespersonThis is likely to have wasted billions of pounds of taxpayers money in delays and overspends. The department, as well as resetting the project, must now reset itself to manage this project to a workable conclusion in line with the eventually agreed budget and timescale.To do this, they will need to employ people with the correct range of skill-sets to critically supervise and oversee this huge project. This is the only way to salvage its severely tarnished reputation. We expect to see a real improvement when we next examine this matter.A spokesperson for HS2 Ltd said: Mark Wild, our new chief executive, agrees with the committees conclusion that there has been failure in the management of HS2s cost and schedule.He is taking decisive action to get the project back on track at the lowest feasible cost.His fundamental reset is critical to ensure the successful delivery of HS2s goals driving economic growth and connecting our biggest cities with fast and reliable journeys.A DfT spokesperson said: The continuously climbing costs of HS2 are completely unacceptable.That is why the government acted swiftly to get the project back under control by bringing new leadership to HS2 Ltd, directing the company to begin work on resetting culture, schedule and costs, and reinstating robust ministerial oversight.HS2 Ltd is working with its supply chain to reset the programme and deliver the railway safely and at the lowest reasonable cost.
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  • LDAs Union Terrace Gardens among 21 projects shortlisted for RIAS Awards
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    Long-delayed Aberdeen scheme joined on list by Moxon bridge and Ptolemy Dean castle refurbishmentUnion Terrace Gardens, Aberdeen by Stallan-Brand Architecture + Design & LDA DesignSource: Andrew LeeAldourie Castle Estate, Highlands by Ptolemy Dean ArchitectsSource: Simon KennedyGairnshiel Jubilee Bridge, Aberdeenshire by Moxon ArchitectsSource: Simon KennedyThe Nucleus Building, University of Edinburgh by Sheppard RobsonSource: Keth HunterThe Port of Leith Distillery, Edinburgh by Threesixty ArchitectureSource: Simon Messer PhotographyFairburn Tower, Highlands by Simpson & BrownSource: LandmarkAdam Smith Building, University of Glasgow by HassellSource: Hufton+CrowRock Cove, Argyll and Bute by CameronWebster ArchitectsSource: Paul TyagiCaochan na Creige, Isle of Harris by Izat ArundellSource: Richard GastonDundreggan Rewilding Centre, Highlands by Threesixty ArchitectureSource: McAteer PhotoHMP & YOI Stirling by Holmes Miller ArchitectsSource: Chris HumphriesChryston Community Hub, North Lanarkshire by Ryder ArchitectureSource: Paul ZanreHarmeny Outdoor Learning Hub, Edinburgh by Loader Monteith & Studio SJM ArchitectsSource: Jim StephensonRosebank Distillery, Falkirk by MLASource: IMDLtdRiverside Primary School, Perth by ArchitypeSource: David Barbour1/15show captionLDA Designs long-delayed Union Terrace Gardens in Aberdeen is among 21 projects shortlisted for the 2025 Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland (RIAS) Awards.The 28m revamp of the celebrated Victorian park was finally opened in December 2022 in collaboration with Stallan Brand after decades of setbacks and design changes.The nomination means the scheme, which includes a series of new pavilions and a zig-zag path winding through the sunken pleasure gardens, could form part of the longlist for the RIAS Andrew Doolan Best Building in Scotland Award, the Scottish equivalent of the Stirling Prize.> Also read:Union Terrace Gardens, Aberdeen by LDA DesignOther projects on this years shortlist for the RIAS awards include a bridge in Aberdeenshire by Moxon Architects, a teaching facility at the University of Edinburgh by Sheppard Robson and a refurbishment of Aldourie Castle in the Highlands by Ptolemy Dean.Each project will be visited by a RIAS Awards jury, which includes Ann Nisbet Studio founder Ann Nisbet, Craig Hamilton Architects founding director Craig Hamilton and V&A Dundee programme director Caroline Grewar. The jury is chaired by Jessam Al-Jawad, director at Al-Jawad Pike Architects.RIAS chief executive Tamsie Thomason said: I am thrilled to see such an exciting variety of projects on this years shortlist. Year on year, we strive to encourage entries from all corners of Scotland, and these 21 projects offer a fantastic representation of exceptional design thinking in rural and urban settings.The strength of this shortlist is the diversity of project types, which provide people from all walks of life with high-quality, sustainable, and innovative architecture for working, learning, and living.I am very much looking forward to joining our judges as they visit each of the shortlisted projects next month, as they have the undoubtedly tough task of choosing our winners. It will be an honour to celebrate our winning practices and projects at our awards ceremony in the spring.The winners will be announced at the end of May, with winning projects making up the longlist for the Andrew Doolan prize and also eligible for recognition in the RIBA Awards.The 2025 RIAS Awards shortlisted projects are:Adam Smith Building, University of Glasgow by HassellAldourie Castle Estate, Highlands by Ptolemy Dean ArchitectsAthron Hill - Phases 1 & 2, Kinross by Fraser/Livingstone ArchitectsCaochan na Creige, Isle of Harris by Izat ArundellChryston Community Hub, North Lanarkshire by Ryder ArchitectureDundreggan Rewilding Centre, Highlands by Threesixty ArchitectureEllegowan Regeneration, Dundee by Collective ArchitectureFairburn Tower, Highlands by Simpson & BrownGairnshiel Jubilee Bridge, Aberdeenshire by Moxon ArchitectsGartnerichnich Cottage, Stirling by Dualchas ArchitectsHarmeny Outdoor Learning Hub, Edinburgh by Loader Monteith & Studio SJM ArchitectsHMP & YOI Stirling by Holmes Miller ArchitectsKilmartin Museum, Argyll and Bute by Reiach and Hall ArchitectsKinloch Lodge, Highland by GRASRiverside Primary School, Perth by ArchitypeRock Cove, Argyll and Bute by CameronWebster ArchitectsRosebank Distillery, Falkirk by MLAThe Nucleus Building, University of Edinburgh by Sheppard RobsonThe Port of Leith Distillery, Edinburgh by Threesixty ArchitectureThe Seed, Dundee by Kirsty Maguire ArchitectUnion Terrace Gardens, Aberdeen by Stallan-Brand Architecture + Design & LDA Design
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  • This 'Jurassic World' Robotic Baby T. Rex Hatches From Gooey Eggs in Hopes of Becoming a Hot Toy
    www.cnet.com
    After 32 years of Jurassic Park toys, one company has finally cracked the code on crackingeggs -- bringing an iconic movie scene to life with a robotic baby dinosaur that emerges from a gooey egg.Spin Master's Primal Hatch, going on sale this fall for $59.99, is a T. rex toy programmed to use its snout to break out of a shell with a slimy red membrane. It resembles the moment from the 1993 Jurassic Park movie when the character John Hammond encourages a baby velociraptor to push its way out of its egg in the incubator room. Watch this: Hatch a 'Jurassic World' T. Rex with Spin Master's Primal Hatch First Look 00:30 "We tried to make it as cinematic as we could," said Jamie Ricottone, one of the toy's designers at Spin Master, who gave me an early preview of the T. rex in a video call. The Primal Hatch toy will be emerging to the public for the first time this weekend, roaring for crowds at the New York Toy Fair.Spin Master has experience with hatching hit toys. It created Hatchimals in 2016, which became one of the hottest Christmas toys -- a phenomena on par with Tickle Me Elmo and Furby. Hatchimals are robotic, fuzzy fantasy creatures that break out of egg shells when first unboxed. The Primal Hatch takes the same concept but ties it to Universal's Jurassic World franchise -- with added slime, teeth and movie-accurate growls to appeal to boys ages 5 to 7.The toy comes with nest material to hold the egg in place, and as the hatching process begins, kids tap the shell to encourage the T. rex to emerge. The sticky slime membrane on the inside of the shell delays the eerie reveal. Spin MasterAfter discarding the slimy shell pieces, the next stage determines if the T. rex will be friendly or fierce. Personality is shaped in how you interact with the touch and sound sensors. There is a clicker accessory to get reactions from the T. rex -- but don't expect a well-behaved dino. After all, you're not quite on the level of Jurassic World's velociraptor trainer Owen Grady (played by Chris Pratt) when it comes to training dinosaurs. Ricottone said his team learned from working in partnership with Universal that "they are dinos, not pets -- you can't train them what to do."The T. rex has glowing eyes that change color to indicate its mood. Red means angry, yellow means it's neutral and green is a good boy. Feed it enough steak and you might get a happy dino. If you agitate it enough, the creature could go totally berserk. They imprint on the first creature they come in contact with. Spin MasterPrimal Hatch includes game modes and over 100 sounds and interactions; Jurassic fans should recognize the sound effects from the movies. The more you play with it, the more it matures -- and eventually may grow enough to let out that iconic Jurassic Park T. rex roar.The toy is expected to ride a wave of dinosaur fervor as Jurassic World: Rebirth debuts July 2 in theaters. The plot involves a character capturing DNA from dino eggs.With Spin Master's egg, the batteries are included -- actual dino DNA is not.
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  • 'Wicked': Streaming Release Date and How to Watch From Anywhere
    www.cnet.com
    Dust off a broomstick and warm up your pipes -- the first part of Universal's film adaptation of Wicked has a Peacock streaming date.The streaming service is also throwing in the sing-along version, so you can memorize all the lyrics during the wait for part two, titled Wicked: For Good. Committed fans will be able to enjoy more bonus content, including deleted scenes and behind-the-scenes featurettes.The first part of Wicked stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande as Elphaba and Glinda, students who become unlikely friends after meeting at Shiz University in the Land of Oz. The movie, which adapts the musical stage play, scored 10 Oscar nominations, including for best picture.Wicked: For Good is still suspended somewhere over Oz. If you need a popular pick while you wait for its Nov. 21 release date, here's when Peacock will stream the first part of Wicked.Read more:How to Stream the 2025 Oscar Nominees Ariana Grande could win best supporting actress at the Oscars for portraying Glinda. Universal PicturesWhen to watch Wicked on PeacockViewers in the US can start watching the musical movie as early as 5 a.m. ET (2 a.m. PT) on Friday, March 21.Peacock plans start at $8 a month or $80 a year for Peacock Premium, which is ad-supported. The other option is Peacock Premium Plus, which costs $14 a month or $140 a year and includes downloads, your live local NBC station and fewer commercials. James Martin/CNET Peacock's recent streaming deal on the annual Premium plan is no longer available, but there are ways to save if you're astudentor aXfinity Internet or Instacart Plus customer. Here's our review of the streaming service and a roundup of shows you should watch. See at Peacock How to watch Wicked from anywhere with a VPNPerhaps you're traveling abroad and want to stream Peacock while away from home. With a VPN, you're able to virtually change your location on your phone, tablet or laptop to access the movie from anywhere in the world. There are also other good reasons to use a VPN for streaming.A VPN is the best way to encrypt your traffic to stop your internet service provider from throttling your speeds. Using a VPN is also a great idea if you're traveling and want to add an extra layer of privacy for your devices and log-ins when connecting to Wi-Fi networks. Streaming TV can be a bit smoother with a reliable, quality VPN that'spassed our testsand meets our security standards.You can use a VPN to stream content legally as long as VPNs are allowed in your country and you have a valid subscription to the streaming service you're using. The US and Canada are among the countries where VPNs are legal, but we advise against streaming or downloading content on illegal torrent sites. We recommend ExpressVPN, but you may opt for another provider fromour best list, such as Surfshark or NordVPN. James Martin/CNET 2024 Price $13 per month, $100 for the first 15 months (then $117 per year) or $140 for the first 28 months (then $150 per year)Latest Tests DNS leaks detected, 35% speed loss in 2025 testsNetwork 3,000 plus servers in 105 countriesJurisdiction British Virgin Islands If you're looking for a secure and dependable VPN, our Editors' Choice is ExpressVPN. It's fast, works on multiple devices and provides stable streams. It's $13 a month, or you can opt for a deal that gives you 15 months for $6.67 per month if you pay the total amount up front.ExpressVPN offers a 30-day money-back guarantee.Read our review of ExpressVPN. See at ExpressVPN Follow the VPN provider's instructions for installation, and choose a country where Wicked will be streaming on Peacock. Before you open the streaming app, make sure you're connected to your VPN using your selected region. If you want to stream Wicked on more than one device, it's possible you'll need to configure each one to ensure you're signed in. Go to settings and check your network connections to verify you're logged in and connected to your VPN account. Now you're ready to open Peacock to stream.If you run into issues with streaming, first make sure your VPN is up and running on its encrypted IP address. Double-check that you've followed installation instructions correctly and picked the right geographical area for viewing. If you still encounter connection problems, you may need to reboot your device. Close all apps and windows, restart your device and connect to your VPN first. Note that some streaming services will restrict VPN access.
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  • The Measles Outbreak in Texas Is Why Vaccines Matter
    www.scientificamerican.com
    OpinionFebruary 28, 20255 min readThe Measles Outbreak in Texas Is Why Vaccines MatterOpting against vaccines may uphold ideas of personal freedom, but it has doomed the county at the center of the Texas measles outbreakBy Megha Satyanarayana edited by Jeanna Bryner Mediscan/Alamy Stock PhotoA school-age child with measles died in Texas this week, making it the first measles death in the U.S. in 10 years. This child was one of dozens of unvaccinated kids infected with measles in a multi-county, two-state outbreak of an illness the U.S. had officially eliminated 25 years ago.As Texas and New Mexico public health officials respond dutifully with vaccine clinics, contact tracing and exposure alerts, people are still getting sick from this vaccine-preventable disease. Measles is one of the most contagious illnesses on the planet, so it will be a while before this outbreak ends. More people will get sick. Hopefully no one else will die.Yet during a press briefing that same day, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., secretary of health and human services, downplayed the scope of this outbreak. Its not unusual, he said, noting other measles outbreaks this year and last, and saying that most of the hospitalized children are there to be quarantined, implying they werent that sick, just being isolated to prevent the spread of the disease.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.This is untrue. The outbreaks this year are unusual. For one, this is the third outbreak in 2025, and we are just two months in. Second, at least 133 cases have been confirmed in the current Texas/New Mexico outbreak, which is nearly half the number of infections in the 16 outbreaks reported in the U.S. last year, which totaled 285 cases. RFK, Jr., was also wrong about the quarantined children: they have been hospitalized because they are having trouble breathing, not just to keep them isolated.We shouldnt be fighting diseases we once eliminated. We shouldnt be burying children who could live long and fulfilling lives, and we shouldnt be watching as others suffer. For all the doubt that antivaccine advocates, including RFK, Jr., have sowed around childhood immunizations, for all the political proclamations of conscientious objection and the freedom to choose, this child did not have a choice. Neither did any of the others who are sick. When it comes to public health, our choices do not stop with us. And our leaders simply do not recognize that.Of course there are medical reasons why some children cannot get vaccines. This isnt about them. This is about the million reasons why we, as a nation, have decided that our collective health is less important than our individual desires. We saw this play out during COVID, which ended up claiming more than one million lives at the peak of the pandemic between 2020 and 2022. People dont trust government. They dont trust doctors. They dont trust scientists. They dont trust vaccines. Instead many of us trust the people who tell us what we want to hear. We trust the evidence we like and discard the rest. We dont want to be told what to do.But in believing what you want to believe, in believing the people who challenge, without basis, the evidence we have that working collectively improves everyones health, we fall right into the trap of what misinformation is trying to do: distract us so we dont see whats happening right under our noses.And the measles vaccine is the perfect example.For decades, people worldwide have been inoculated with a live, attenuated virus. This is a strain of the measles virus, cut off at the knees. It teaches our immune system to recognize and attack the real, wild virus, without getting us sick. But a few of us do. A few people get vaccinated and then get a rash, a fever, essentially a less intense case of the measles. (And a few people, even with the two-dose vaccine regimen, get sick anyway.) And this is what you see on social media as people blame the vaccine itself for causing measles. Never mind how that poor child would have suffered had they gotten an actual full-on infection, one that could cause brain swelling, trouble breathing or actual death.Or, as RFK, Jr., did in Samoa, look at the scant evidence around two measles-vaccine related deaths, and declare the cause is the vaccine, rather than human error of nurses who accidentally prepared the vaccine with a muscle relaxant instead of water. And now, with little public discourse, the Trump administration has delayed a meeting of the nations vaccine experts, purporting to root out undue influence and conflicts of interest in people who have a vested interest in population health. Maybe the secretary will find somethingwho knows? But in the meantime, he sows doubt and distrust in literally the one thing, other than antibiotics, that explains why so many of us are even alive today to have these conversations.Nothing in health care is perfect. The human body is complex and individual, and as I said in a previous column, what works for some, wont work for others. Too many people view the risks of illness from the vaccine as outweighing the risk of getting measles itself, and whats abundantly clear now is that the risk of getting measles is increasing.Evidence has shown, repeatedly, that human populations need a vaccine-uptake rate of 95 percent to ensure herd immunity against measles; the U.S. is falling short of that. For the Mennonite community at the center of the Texas outbreak, if their members decided to forego vaccination, everyone around them needed to be vaccinated if those kids stood a chance of not getting sick. And instead, evidence indicates that not enough people in that part of the state are vaccinated. Only 82 percent of people in Gaines County, Texas, the epicenter of the outbreak, have their measles vaccines. One of the three school districts in Gaines County has an MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine rate of 46 percent. Many schools in Texas harbor dismal MMR vaccination rates.In the meantime, the antivax movement and the people who think that if the mechanism of prevention we have in front of us isnt perfect, if it ever fails, we should ban it altogether, downplay measles as no big deala few spots and a fever and then we are done.The sick kids in Texas would disagree.This is an opinion and analysis article, and the views expressed by the author or authors are not necessarily those of Scientific American.
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  • New NASA Space Telescope Will See the Universe in 102 Colors
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    February 28, 20257 min readNew NASA Space Telescope Will See the Universe in 102 ColorsNASAs SPHEREx mission will survey the entire sky in 102 different colors of light, offering scientists an unprecedented look at the earliest days of the universe and much moreBy Meghan Bartels edited by Lee BillingsShort for Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer, SPHEREx will create a map of the cosmos like no other. NASA/JPL-Caltech/BAE SystemsNASA is ready to launch a space telescope to see the universe in a whole new way.The agencys Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer, or SPHEREx, mission, is scheduled to launch no earlier than March 2 at 10:09 P.M. EST from Californias Vandenberg Space Force Base. The $488-million SPHEREx mission is tailored for cosmology; among its key goals is a sort of celestial statistics that scientists hope will help them understand the earliest moments of cosmic history. Once at work, the telescope will survey the entire sky in more than 100 different colors of infrared light, creating a massive dataset that will have vast implications across astronomy.You dont normally have a survey like this, says Jo Dunkley, an astrophysicist at Princeton University, who serves on a NASA review board that is monitoring the mission. Its really unusual and really neat.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.Typically, missions surveying the heavens have wide fields of view but at only a handful of individual or groups of wavelengths of light. Telescopes that can analyze light by its wavelength usually only do so over a small area of sky, pointing at specific objects of interest. For example, the camera on the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, which is expected to begin observations later this year, will pan the sky in six bands of wavelengths. In contrast, the James Webb Space Telescope has several observing modes that can break light into many wavelengths, but all of them are limited by the observatorys small field of view.SPHEREx works differently. To understand it, consider a color printer that breaks an image into one layer each of four different ink colorscyan, magenta, yellow and black. These colors combine to form a final full-color picture. Similarly, SPHEREx is equipped with six special filters that will split its view of the full sky into 102 infrared colors.Its really mapping the sky in a novel way, says Olivier Dor, a cosmologist at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the California Institute of Technology and a project scientist for SPHEREx. Its about opening up a new window on the universe.Although the data that the spacecraft gathers will be of broad relevance across all of astronomy, the SPHEREx team has three key science objectives. These range from mapping various ices in and around our galactic neighborhood to tallying all the universes light over its history to even probing some of the first moments of time itself, shortly after the big bang.Ices GaloreIn its studies closest to the here and now, SPHEREx will look for assorted ices throughout the Milky Way and its neighboring galaxies. To do so, the telescope will map out the presence of water ice, of course, as well as frozen carbon dioxide, methanol, ammonia and other intriguing compounds. Each of these substances bears its own distinctive molecular signature, or spectrum, which is imprinted in wavelengths of light that interact with it. And scientists will be able to discern these ice spectra with unprecedented clarity thanks to SPHERExs observations.Gathering such spectra has historically been a difficult process; only about 200 such measurements for these ices were made before the launch of JWST. SPHEREx, in contrast, will make some eight million such observations. Scientists hope that the work will provide a better understanding of the complex chemical processes that bond these ices onto interstellar dust grainsand presumably deliver them to nascent planetary systems.This image by NASAs James Webb Space Telescopes Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) features the central region of the Chamaeleon I dark molecular cloud, which resides 630 light years away. The cold, wispy cloud material (blue, center) is illuminated in the infrared by the glow of the young, outflowing protostar Ced 110 IRS 4 (orange, upper left).NASA, ESA, CSA, and M. Zamani (ESA)Its likely the case that the ice in the interstellar medium is the source of water on Earth and in our solar system, says James Bock, a cosmologist at JPL and the California Institute of Technology and principal investigator of SPHEREx. This is more than some academic triviality, too, given how important these particular molecules are for a little phenomenon we call life.All the Universes LightIces aside, much of SPHERExs work will concern the earlier, more distant cosmos, thanks to the telescopes focus on infrared light. Because the universe is constantly expanding in all directions, a wavelength of light traveling through it is literally stretched. Scientists call this phenomenon redshifting because, within the range of light human eyes can see, red light has the longest wavelengths. The more space light traverses, the more its wavelength is stretched, and the redder it becomesso any light emitted from ancient, faraway sources often ends up becoming the infrared light SPHEREx can see.This also means that careful analysis of an objects redshifted light allows astronomers to calculate how far away the object is from Earth. Across astronomy, measuring this deepness in the sky adds a third dimension of distance (and of time, thanks to lights finite speed) onto our otherwise flat maps of the universe.These tactics are particularly powerful for regions where SPHEREx will gather the most dataupward and downward from the plane of our solar system, within swaths of the sky dubbed the north and south ecliptic poles. The telescope will observe each ecliptic pole once every orbit all mission long, seeking something seemingly ineffable: the faint signal of all the light emitted over the universes history, which SPHEREx scientists will then parse out across time.Researchers have already estimated this cosmic flux by measuring the amount of light generated by representative samples of galaxies. But they know this undercounts the true light production. Some galaxies are too far away or too faint to be measured via this approximation technique, and the light from stars at a galaxys diffuse outskirts is easily overlooked. But SPHEREx isnt gazing at individual galaxies: its looking at the whole sky, so it will see even this otherwise missed light lurking in the background.Even if you dont see a star there, well still see the light, the photons collectively emitted by all of the galaxies in the universe, says Asantha Cooray, a cosmologist at the University of California, Irvine, and a member of the SPHEREx team.But simply seeing isnt enough: scientists also want to understand how the universes total light production has changed over time, which is where redshifting and SPHERExs wavelength-rich data come in. Tracking these temporal changes could help reveal how the first galaxies developed, for example, or how the strange little red dots observed by JWST formed mere hundreds of millions of years after the big bang.Operating from low Earth orbit, SPHEREx will sweep across the sky, taking about 600 exposures each day. Using a technique called spectroscopy, the observatory will image every section of the sky 102 times, each time using a different color filter that blocks all wavelengths except one.NASA/JPL-CaltechEach wavelength is kind of giving you a different slice through cosmic history, Bock says. Its as if the four-color image of our printer analogy exploded out into a series of distinct layers between the viewer and the pagewith each more distant layer being significantly older than the one in front of it, encoding billions of years of history in their transitions.We are trying to probe pretty much all the whole cosmic history, all the way to the epoch of first star formation, Cooray says.Zooming In on InflationThe last of SPHERExs primary science goals looks even further back in time, all the way to the moments after the big bang, during which most scientists believe that a phenomenon called cosmic inflation drove an explosive increase in the universes size.Inflation was a big event in our universe, Bock says. It expanded the universe dramaticallya trillion-trillion-fold or something like that.For something so epochal, inflation is surprisingly hard to study. It happened when the universes matter was in an almost inconceivably dense, energetic state, well beyond anything scientists can attempt to mimic in a laboratory. SPHEREx wont change those constraints, but it will allow scientists to pursue a roundabout way of understanding how inflation unfolded.Its really a discovery machine. Olivier Dor, cosmologistAt the heart of this work is SPHERExs survey of the entire sky and many of the galaxies in itsome 450 million, all told. The telescope will pinpoint the location of each of these galaxies, creating a massive three-dimensional atlas of the cosmos.From there will come the celestial statistics. Based on different theories about how inflation might work and what other phenomena might affect it, scientists have developed different models of how matter would have been scattered across the newborn universe. Despite the intervening eons, this pattern should still be etched across the cosmos in the spatial distributions of galaxies. And SPHEREx should provide the data needed to detect it, evaluating which inflationary models it fits and which it doesntsupporting some inflation scenarios and refuting others, even without observing inflation directly.We are intellectually going back in time to the origin of the universe, Dor says. We can actually, pretty much with pen on paper, go from the distribution of galaxies on these larger scales, using physics we know, all the way to the physics of inflation. Thats something which is very powerful, very mind-boggling.During its initial journey away from Earth, SPHEREx is also facilitating scientists understanding of the sun. A second NASA mission, composed of four small satellites collectively called Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere, or PUNCH, will hitch a ride with the space telescope. Like SPHEREx, these four satellites will orbit Earth along the line where day meets night. But unlike their larger cosmos-focused companion, the PUNCH satellites will look toward our star, studying how its outer atmosphere feeds the stream of charged particles called the solar wind that suffuses our entire solar system.But even SPHEREx proper will contribute to science far beyond its three primary astronomy questions. Although it is tailored to peer into the distance, for example, it will nonetheless observe everything that falls in its path, including nearer oddities such as planets, asteroids and comets. And because it will survey the full sky at least four timesquite possibly more, given NASAs record of wringing as much science as possible from its spacecraftresearchers interested in quickly-changing events such as supernovas will also seek fresh finds in SPHEREx data.The beauty of astronomy is: we know that every time we look at the sky in a different way, with a different instrument, from a different angle, we discover new things, Dor says. SPHEREx will simply be the newest iteration of this truism, he adds. Its really a discovery machine, Dor says.
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  • Diablo 4 Season 8 pushed back "a couple of weeks"
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    Diablo 4 Season 8 pushed back "a couple of weeks"Expect "great updates" and the return of an old "friend"...Image credit: Blizzard News by Vikki Blake Contributor Published on Feb. 28, 2025 Diablo 4's eighth season will release a "couple of weeks" later than scheduled after Blizzard decided to serve "the game, not the plan".Writing on social media, general manager of Diablo Rod Fergusson revealed development was taking a little longer than originally anticipated, but did soften the news by teasing "an old 'friend'" was making a return.Diablo IV | Burning Questions | Buffs, Barriers, and More.Watch on YouTube"In the spirit of serving the game, not the plan, Season 8 will take a couple of weeks longer to bake than we initially anticipated," Fergusson wrote."The team is hard at work on some great updates coming in the next season, so stay tuned. Looking forward to seeing an old 'friend'." To see this content please enable targeting cookies.That "old 'friend'" has got players excited - and speculating. Whilst Fergusson couldn't be drawn on who that friend - or foe, as the case may be - is, fans have been suggesting all kinds of characters, from to Cain to Covetous Shen to Lyndon. Others posit it could be the return of Lorath, Tyrael, Zoltun Kulle, Eirena, or Kormac.Right now, it's unclear exactly how long the season will be delayed for, but we'll keep you posted.Earlier this month, Ed reported that Diablo 4's next expansion won't arrive until 2026, marking a change in its annual plans.Fergusson made the announcement at a DICE panel event, saying: "In 2025, or just before Season 8, we will have a 2025 roadmap for Diablo 4."Now, our second expansion won't be on that roadmap, because our second expansion is coming in 2026, but at least players will have the road ahead.""A polished, bewitching upgrade that sinks its claws into you - featuring perhaps the best character class in Diablo's history," reads our Vessel of Hatred review.
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  • Nintendo removing game from Switch Online catalogue in Japan
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    Nintendo Switch Online's retro game collection is losing its first game - in Japan at least. Read more
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  • Helldivers 2 CEO reveals stratagem they want from Aliens that would be cool as hell
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    You can trust VideoGamer. Our team of gaming experts spend hours testing and reviewing the latest games, to ensure you're reading the most comprehensive guide possible. Rest assured, all imagery and advice is unique and original. Check out how we test and review games hereEver since the crossover with Killzone at the end of 2024, Helldivers 2 fans have been eager for more collaborations. Arrowhead has confirmed that the next crossover is in-development, and there is the possibility it might have already leaked. One of the few sci-fi franchises Arrowhead has said theyre open to collaborating with is Aliens, and the Helldivers 2 CEO has revealed a stratagem that they want to see from Aliens that would be cool as hell.Helldivers 2 x Aliens stratagemOn February 27th, Arrowhead CEO, Shams Jorjani, was answering questions from fans on Discord. One user asked Jorjani if Arrowhead Will be having a sort of APC stratagem or Mech changes down the line.The CEO admitted that an APC stratagem would be cool as hell, and he also specifically pointed out the one from Aliens.Image credit: Helldivers DiscordRight now, HD2 players can drive an FRV (Fast Recon Vehicle), so the introduction of an APC (Armored Personnel Carrier) would be fantastic. There have been APC and tank gameplay leaks in the past for Helldivers 2, and these even appeared before leaks for the FRV. Hopefully the APC isnt something that has been abandoned.As for Aliens specifically, what Jorjani is referring to is the M577. This is the beautiful vehicle Ripley uses to save the Colonial Marines after they first enter the hive of Xenomorphs.Jorjani has previously said he would love an Aliens warbond based on the colonial marines, and it would be fantastic to see the M577 along with Aliens inspired armor. The M41A pulse rifleand M56 smart gun would also be fantastic weapons for gunning down bugs in Helldivers 2.This doesnt confirm that a HD2 x Aliens collaboration is happening, and there are other IPs ideal for Arrowheads next crossover. Jorjani has previously said Games Workshop would love a HD2 x Warhammer crossover, meanwhile, both Titanfall and Deep Rock Galactic have publicly given the thumbs up to a potential collaboration.For more Helldivers 2, check out our guide to thebest warbonds ranked, along with thebest stratagemsandbest throwables. We have also a guide to thebest weapons, and, if youre coming back to HD2 for the first time in a long while, we have a bunch oftips and tricksto help you get reaccustomed to the battlefield.Helldivers 2Platform(s):PC, PlayStation 5Genre(s):Action, Shooter, Third Person8VideoGamerRelated TopicsHelldivers 2 Subscribe to our newsletters!By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy and may receive occasional deal communications; you can unsubscribe anytime.Share
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