Full Width [alt+shift+f] FOCUS MODE Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]
47
Fashion students at the College of DuPage successfully designed gear to protect Fermilab’s SPOT robot from radioactive dust. In a recent demonstration for Engineers Week in Chicago, an engineering physicist took the stage accompanied by an unusual guest: a four-legged robot wearing personal protective gear. It all started in 2019 when a team of engineers, physicists, software developers and technicians gathered at the US Department of Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory to explore and develop robotic technologies. Their goal was, and still is, to use those technologies to help people safely and efficiently run the lab’s particle accelerators.  “Robots have a great potential to help us minimize personnel exposure to environmental hazards, such as radiation, and increase operational efficiency of the accelerators,” says Mayling Wong-Squires, the leader of the Fermilab Accelerator Directorate’s Robotics Initiative.      To create particle beams, Fermilab...
over a year ago

Comments

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from symmetry magazine

Celebrating Dark Matter Day in Latin America

Scientists, artists, communicators and physics fans find creative ways to mark the unofficial holiday devoted to dark matter.

a year ago 38 votes
Physics fashion and collider couture

Symmetry is back with more physics-themed Halloween costumes.

a year ago 113 votes
New map of space precisely measures nearly 400,000 nearby galaxies

The Siena Galaxy Atlas will be a tool for research into how galaxies form and evolve, gravitational waves, dark matter and the structure of our universe.

a year ago 61 votes
Spacetime: All the universe’s a stage

In the 1900s, Albert Einstein unified the concepts of space and time, giving us a useful new way to picture the universe.

a year ago 141 votes
CERN opens Science Gateway

About 1,400 people attended the grand opening of CERN’s new science education center.

a year ago 92 votes

More in science

Tiny Tubes Reveal Clues to the Evolution of Complex Life

Scientists have identified tubulin structures in primitive Asgard archea that may have been the precursor of our own cellular skeletons. The post Tiny Tubes Reveal Clues to the Evolution of Complex Life first appeared on Quanta Magazine

4 hours ago 2 votes
Upcycling Plastic and Reducing Mineral Waste

It is becoming increasingly clear, in my opinion, that we need to further shift from an overall economic system based on a linear model of extraction-manufacture-use-waste to a more circular model where as much waste as possible becomes feedstock for another manufacturing process. It also seems clear, after reading about such things for a long […] The post Upcycling Plastic and Reducing Mineral Waste first appeared on NeuroLogica Blog.

6 hours ago 2 votes
There Once Was a Man Called Curley

In the village of Bellewstown, about 15 miles north of Dublin, Ireland, they still talk about what Barney Curley did back in 1975. It all happened during a horse race on the Hill of Crockafotha. It was just an amateur jockey race on a lazy summer day in a sleepy, remote town; it wasn’t meant to be anything special. The last thing anyone expected was to witness the making of history. The race in question occurred on 26 June 1975. Barney Curley–our protagonist, if you could call him that–owned one of the horses running later that day. But at the racecourse, as preparations were being made, Curley was nowhere to be seen. And not because he wasn’t in attendance–it was because he was taking great pains to stay out of sight. If the trackside bookmakers caught wind that he was at Bellewstown that day, or if they discovered that he was the owner of one of the horses, they would be on full alert, and take precautions with the wagers and odds. Curley had earned a reputation in horse racing circles–he was known to engage in some gambling shenanigans from time to time. But the shenanigan he was planning that day was his most ambitious to date, hands-down. As the spectators placed their wagers and settled in around the edge of the track for a pleasant afternoon of laid back horse racing, Curley was concealed in the thicket of gorse shrubs in the center section of the oval-shaped track. This particular infield wasn’t ideal for human occupation, it was all dust and thorns. Nevertheless he stood in his trademark felt fedora, shrouded by tall shrubbery, far from the other spectators, a pair of binoculars pressed to his eyes. In the distance the loudspeaker announced, “They’re off!” Curley tugged his hat down tight over his bald head as if he could hide inside of it, and peered through his field glasses toward the rumble of horse hooves. In the next five minutes, if everything went according to plan, all of Barney Curley’s considerable money troubles would be over. If the plan went sideways–if his animal was not up to the task, or there was one inopportune stumble–he would be utterly ruined. Continue reading ▶

2 days ago 7 votes
Analog vs. Digital: The Race Is On To Simulate Our Quantum Universe

Recent progress on both analog and digital simulations of quantum fields foreshadows a future in which quantum computers could illuminate phenomena that are far too complex for even the most powerful supercomputers. The post Analog vs. Digital: The Race Is On To Simulate Our Quantum Universe first appeared on Quanta Magazine

3 days ago 4 votes
(Ethically dubious) ways to give patients more choice | Out-Of-Pocket

Do these ideas give you the ick? Or is there something interesting here

4 days ago 7 votes