Wednesday, January 3
Tuesday, January 2
Quantum Shadows: Images Hidden in Noise
A groundbreaking phase imaging method, resistant to phase noise and effective in dim light, has been developed by international researchers. This technique, detailed in Science Advances, enhances imaging capabilities in fields ranging from medical research to art preservation. (Artist’s concept.) Credit: SciTechDaily.com
Innovative quantum-inspired imaging technique excels in low-light conditions, offering new prospects in medical imaging and art conservation.
Researchers at the University of Warsaw’s Faculty of Physics with colleagues from Stanford University and Oklahoma State University have introduced a quantum-inspired phase imaging method based on light intensity correlation measurements that is robust to phase noise. The new imaging method can operate even with extremely dim illumination and can prove useful in emerging applications such as in infrared and X-ray interferometric imaging and quantum and matter-wave interferometry.
Revolutionizing Imaging Techniques
No matter if you take photos of a cat with your smartphone or image cell cultures with an advanced microscope, you do this by measuring the intensity (brightness) of light pixel by pixel. Light is characterized, not only by its intensity but also by its phase. Interestingly, transparent objects can become visible if you’re able to measure the phase delay of light that they introduce. READ MORE...
A New Year - 2024
Why?
Because we are a year older for the most part and with age comes wisdom.
2023 - was for the most part a disaster depending upon your perspective. For some it was the greatest year ever but for others that was not true.
Last year for me and my wife, although I cannot really speak for her, was no different than 2022 or 2021 or 2020 or any of the years previously past going back to 2015 when we both retired.
Yes, prices were somewhat higher but that increase cost did not change our lifestyle, which is the same thing that will happen to us in 2024.
The only concern that I really have going into 2024 will be getting involved in another war. That involvement must include military weapons as well as personnel.
We have wars in: Ukraine, Israel, and potentially Taiwan in the south China sea. BUT... we are also be baited into a war with Iran and North Korea because those countries refuse to listen to the warnings from our government.
War will not affect me since I am too old to be boots on the ground, but numerous Americans will before they have had a chance to live their lives and those of us left behind will not really care that they died for us.
In some cases, war is good because it helps strengthen our economy and the same could hold true in 2024.
Regardless of the negative possibilities of 2024, I believe this year will basically be no different than the year before for many of us.
The main issue here is that we are still alive to experience 2024 in its entirety.
Lithium Reserve Under US Volcano
The planet’s largest-known lithium deposit may have been found hiding beneath an ancient super volcano along the Nevada–Oregon border in the US. Given the skyrocketing demand for lithium, this deposit could be a treasure trove – although obtaining it could come with a bunch of challenges and dangers.
An estimated 20 to 40 million metric tons of lithium is thought to be contained within sediments of the McDermitt caldera, a caldron-like depression that formed as a result of the volcano erupting and then collapsing on itself. The caldera is found in southeastern Oregon and northern Nevada, taking up a vast portion of land around 45 kilometers (28 miles) long and 35 kilometers (22 miles) wide.
If this estimate is correct, it would mean the McDermitt caldera holds the record for the biggest lithium deposition in the world, beating Bolivia's salt flats, which hold around 23 million tons.
“If you believe their back-of-the-envelope estimation, this is a very, very significant deposit of lithium,’ Anouk Borst, a geologist at KU Leuven University and the Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren, Belgium, told Chemistry World. READ MORE...
Monday, January 1
Sunday, December 31
Saturday, December 30
In The NEWS
Every year on Jan. 1, a new batch of copyrighted works and intellectual property enters the public domain. On Monday, the first versions of Mickey and Minnie Mouse, featured in the 1928 short “Steamboat Willie” (watch here), will become available for public use.
Russia launches 122 missiles, 36 drones against Ukraine.
At least 30 people were killed and 144 injured across Ukraine Friday from the attack. The Ukrainian military said it had intercepted most of the missiles and drones. The attack is considered the largest aerial barrage since the war between Russia and Ukraine began in February 2022. See war updates here.
South Africa accuses Israel of genocide in case brought to top UN court.
South Africa, which has been a critic of Israel's military campaign in Gaza and has compared it to South Africa's past apartheid regime, seeks an order from the UN's International Court of Justice to halt Israel's attacks and declare Israel in violation of the Genocide Convention (see 101). Israel maintains it is abiding by international law. Separately, tens of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza moved south to Rafah, while a delegation met in Egypt Friday for cease-fire talks. See war updates here.
World population projected to top 8 billion on New Year's Day.
The world's population grew by more than 75 million people this year, up 0.95% from New Year's Day 2023, according to the US Census Bureau. On Jan. 1, the population is expected to reach a little over 8 billion, from 7.9 billion a year ago. Next year, 4.3 births and two deaths are expected worldwide every second. Track the Census Bureau's US and world population clocks here.
California keeps Trump on state's 2024 primary ballot.
Former President Donald Trump will appear on the Republican ballot in California's Super Tuesday (March 5) presidential primary after Secretary of State Shirley Weber (D) published a list of official candidates, including Trump, late Thursday. The news came hours after Maine's secretary of state nixed Trump due to a 14th Amendment clause (see previous write-up). See a state-by-state tracker of challenges here.
At least eight people injured after huge wave batters California coast (w/video).
The massive 20-foot-plus wave crashed onto Ventura, California, flooding surrounding areas and sweeping up a truck. California has been experiencing huge waves this week as a result of low-pressure storm systems in the eastern Pacific Ocean. Coastal flooding and waves in the range of 15 to 20 feet are expected along California's coast through this evening.
Facts About the USA
More people live in New York City than in 40 of the 50 states.
The word “Pennsylvania” is misspelled on the Liberty Bell.
There is enough water in Lake Superior to cover all of North and South America
in one foot of liquid.
There's a town in Washington with treetop bridges made specifically to help
squirrels cross the street .
In 1872, Russia sold Alaska to the Unites States for about 2 cents per acre.
It would take you more than 400 years to spend a night in all of Las Vegas's hotel rooms.
Western Michigan is home to a giant lavender labyrinth so big you can see it on
Google Earth.
There’s an island full of wild monkeys off the coast of South Carolina called
Morgan Island, and it's not open to humans.
There's enough concrete in the Hoover Dam to build a two-lane highway from
San Francisco to New York City.
Arizona and Hawaii are now the only states that don't observe daylight savings time.
Boston has the worst drivers out of the nation's 200 largest cities. Kansas City has the best drivers.
Kansas produces enough wheat each year to feed everyone in the world for about two weeks.
Oregon's Crater Lake is deep enough to cover six Statues of Liberty stacked on top of each other
The Empire State building has its own zip code.
The Los Angeles Coroner’s Office has its own quirky gift shop called Skeletons in the Closet.
The Library of Congress contains approximately 838 miles of bookshelves—long enough to stretch from Houston to Chicago.
Massachusetts’s Lake Chargoggagoggmanchauggagoggchahas the longest place name in the US. (even though it's based on a joke).
In 1922, a man built a house and all his furniture entirely out of 100,000 newspapers.
The structure still stands today in Rockport, Massachusetts.
The entire Denver International Airport is twice the size of Manhattan.
In 1893, an amendment was proposed to rename the country to the "United States of Earth."
A highway in Lancaster, California plays the “William Tell Overture” as you drive over it, thanks to some well-placed grooves in the road .
The total length of Idaho's rivers could stretch across the United States about 40 times.
The town of Centralia, Pennsylvania has been on fire for 55 years.
The one-woman town of Monowi, Nebraska is the only officially incorporated municipality with a population of 1. The sole, 83-year-old resident is the city's mayor, librarian, and bartender.
The number of bourbon barrels in Kentucky outnumbers the state’s population
by more than two million.
New Year's Resolution(s)
- continue eating healthy
- continue writing
- continue to manage stress
- continue not to worry
- continue to take things one day at a time
- continue to think before I speak
- continue to be kind to animals
- continue to be friendly to next door neighbors
- continue to not be so critical of everything
- continue to be proactive and positive
- continue to be more helpful around the house
- continue to learn something new each day
The Challenge of Fast Charging Stations
Sometime in 2024, maybe as early as February, half a dozen electric vehicle charging companies will face a reckoning.
For years, they had little competition except for each other, which is to say, not much. Soon, though, they’ll have to contend with Tesla’s much-lauded Supercharger network.
The EV world, from a charging perspective, was previously split in two. There was Tesla and then there was everyone else. Tesla owners enjoyed widespread, speedy and reliable charging. Everyone else made do by cobbling together accounts from a number of different companies, none of which could boast reliability ratings anywhere near that of Tesla’s.
Then, in May, the wall fell. Ford signed an agreement with Tesla to give its EVs access to 12,000 Superchargers, a subset of the network. Starting in 2024, existing owners will be able to charge at those stalls by using an adapter, and in 2025, Ford said its future EVs will swap the Combined Charging System (CCS) plug for Tesla’s plug, also known as the North American Charging Standard (NACS). READ MORE...
Friday, December 29
That Which is Important to Me
One's first thought might be HEALTH but without financial security, my health would be more or less irrelevant.
So, the first important issue for me is the peace of mind that comes from having financial security...
However, now that I've used peace of mind, it is necessary to understand that financial security is intertwined with peace of mind.
One cannot happen without the other.
My second area of importance is MY HEALTH... and while that may not seem logical, given all the health issues I have, one must understand that I am still above ground because of my health and my body's ability to fight off what's attacking me.
My third area of importance is having and being dedicated to the hobby of writing. Without that hobby, being retired would be incredibly BORING. Bored retirees do not live very long.
My fourth area of importance is having the partner that I have and while we do not always get along and have said things to each other, we regretted saying later, we have remained together for over30 years - a second marriage for both of us. We have the reassurance that we can count on each other as we grow older.
It is that emotional security that helps us both with the knowledge that we have that kind of security as we grow older and realize we cannot take care of ourselves without the help of someone else.
We have different interests and don't rely on each other for our happiness while at the same time, we know that the other person will always be there.
My fifth and final area of importance is friendship. After 76 years of life, I only have ONE TRUE FRIEND,,, We have known each other since high school and have remained friends even though we went off in different directions.
I had a second true friend that I had known since 3rd grade, but he died of colon cancer about 10 years ago.
There are a couple of people living nearby in the same community that will do things for me as I will do things for them, but I would not really consider them to be TRUE FRIENDS. I would say they are being neighborly.
It is interesting, I think, that I have not included FAITH in my list. I believe in a CREATOR, but I am not a fan/follower of institutionalized religion, nor do I really believe what is in the BIBLE because there are so many inconsistencies.
So, some aspects of religion are there but are not an important part of my life. Yes, it is possible that my life is being directed, regardless of the decisions or choices that I make. If that is the case, I have no explanation as to why that is happening. Is that religion? or faith? I don't know.
If I am being kept alive because there is something that I have to do or accomplish, I have no idea what they is, at least at this point in time. It may be revealed to me later and my list will change.
In The NEWS
Former President Donald Trump will not appear on the Republican ballot in Maine's presidential primary after Secretary of State Shenna Bellows (D) ruled his role in the events of Jan. 6, 2021, made him ineligible under a clause in the 14th Amendment. The decision follows a ruling with similar effect by Colorado's Supreme Court, and a decision by Michigan's Supreme Court leaving him eligible for the primary race.
University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Chancellor Joe Gow fired after pornographic videos of Gow and his wife are uncovered (More)
College Football Playoff kicks off Monday with No. 1 Michigan taking on No. 4 Alabama (4 pm ET, ESPN) and No. 2 Washington against No. 3 Texas (8 pm ET, ESPN) (More) | See full college football bowl schedule (More)
Mbongeni Ngema, iconic South African playwright and six-time Tony and Grammy Award nominee, dies in a car crash at 68 (More)
US military's X-37B space plane begins seventh mission; vehicle was launched via a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, allowing it to reach as high as 22,000 miles above Earth (More)
Scientists discover source of mysterious type of immune system cells known as stem-like central memory T cells, which play a key role in remembering previously encountered pathogens (More)
Study suggests ultra-dense neutron stars contain quarks—fundamental particles that make up protons and neutrons, which help make up atoms—at their core (More)
Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi unveils first electric vehicle in bid to compete with Tesla, Porsche (More)
An estimated 150,000 people forced to flee central Gaza as Israeli troops expand operations against Hamas to refugee camps (More) | See updates on war here (More)