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Mars, lasers, and robots: making holes in Mars

by John Koetsier on June 17, 2013

Mars roverIn novel twist on the internet’s “I made this” meme, NASA’s Twitter account for the Curiosity Mars Rover just tweeted that it made a hole in Mars:

Perhaps not a very big hole, but a hole nevertheless.

Over the course of 20 minutes, Curiosity fired its million-watt laser at a tiny section of Martian soil 100 times. A million watts might sound like a lot of power, but Curiosity’s laser only operates for five one-billionths of a second. Still, that was enough to transform a small part of the Martian surface through all four states of matter almost instantaneously: from solid to liquid to gas to plasma in milliseconds.

PIA17262-br

The plasma then explodes (NASA calls it “rapid expansion”) and creates a mini-crater, as you can see in the animated GIF above. NASA didn’t specify, but likely was checking the vaporized matter for its molecular and atomic makeup in an attempt to learn more about the present and past surface of Mars.

I refuse to believe NASA scientist were just “having fun” shooting a laser from a robot on Mars.

The crater is tiny, perhaps a millimeter in size, so there is no danger of indigenous Martians interpreting the laser blasts as a sign of incipient Earthling attack.

Image credits: NASA

Filed under: Gadgets, Mobile, OffBeat, Science

    



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MIT’s new automated ‘life coach’ can help you ace job interviews (video)

by Tom Cheredar on June 16, 2013

Life Coach

In the spirit of Father’s Day, I’m guessing everyone has probably heard the dadism “It’s not what you say, it’s how you say it.” Well, MIT is actually applying that concept to a new automated program that rates your body language as you talk to someone.

Shown in the video embedded below, MIT’s My Automated Conversation coacH (MACH for short) is software that takes the form of an automated person for you to interact with. The representation of a person pops up on a screen and allows you to ask and answer questions. The software then reads facial expressions, speech patterns, and performs behavioral analysis.

The point of MACH is to help people realize when they do things like not make eye contact with someone their talking to as well as other things that might come off as overly nervous or just plan strange. MIT notes that social phobias plague over 15 million adults in the U.S. alone, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. Software like this could really come in handy for those that just aren’t good with social interaction — especially if you’re trying to get a new job.

Filed under: Business, Lifestyle, OffBeat

    



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