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Built-in safeguards might stop AI from designing bioweapons
Head of FAAâs commercial space office takes buyout

The head of the Federal Aviation Administrationâs commercial space transportation office is leaving the agency through a deferred resignation program.
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SpaceNews
- Data architecture is paramount for Golden Dome success â and the Department of Defense is not ready
Data architecture is paramount for Golden Dome success â and the Department of Defense is not ready

President Trump recognizes the grave threats posed by adversary ballistic and hypersonic missiles and has issued mandates for the Department of Defense to deploy a âGolden Domeâ defense shield for [âŚ]
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Scientists Believe Theyâve Witnessed âPlanetary Suicideâ for the First Time
Quantum transducer enables optical control of a superconducting qubit

The future of quantum communication and quantum computing technologies may well revolve around superconducting qubits and quantum circuits, which have already been shown to improve processing capabilities over classical supercomputers â even when there is noise within the system. This scenario could be one step closer with the development of a novel quantum transducer by a team headed up at the Harvard John A Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS).
Realising this future will rely on systems having hundreds (or more) logical qubits (each built from multiple physical qubits). However, because superconducting qubits require ultralow operating temperatures, large-scale refrigeration is a major challenge â there is no technology available today that can provide the cooling power to realise such large-scale qubit systems.
Superconducting microwave qubits are a promising option for quantum processor nodes, but they currently require bulky microwave components. These components create a lot of heat that can easily disrupt the refrigeration systems cooling the qubits.
One way to combat this cooling conundrum is to use a modular approach, with small-scale quantum processors connected via quantum links, and each processor having its own dilution refrigerator. Superconducting qubits can be accessed using microwave photons between 3 and 8 GHz, thus the quantum links could be used to transmit microwave signals. The downside of this approach is that it would require cryogenically cooled links between each subsystem.
On the other hand, optical signals at telecoms frequency (around 200âTHz) can be generated using much smaller form factor components, leading to lower thermal loads and noise, and can be transmitted via low-loss optical fibres. The transduction of information between optical and microwave frequencies is therefore key to controlling superconducting microwave qubits without the high thermal cost.
The large energy gap between microwave and optical photons makes it difficult to control microwave qubits with optical signals and requires a microwaveâoptical quantum transducer (MOQT). These MOQTs provide a coherent, bidirectional link between microwave and optical frequencies while preserving the quantum states of the qubit. A team led by SEAS researcher Marko LonÄar has now created such a device, describing it in Nature Physics.
Electro-optic transducer controls superconducting qubits
LonÄar and collaborators have developed a thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) cavity electro-optic (CEO)-based MOQT (clad with silica to aid thermal dissipation and mitigate optical losses) that converts optical frequencies into microwave frequencies with low loss. The team used the CEO-MOQT to facilitate coherent optical driving of a superconducting qubit (controlling the state of the quantum system by manipulating its energy).
The on-chip transducer system contains three resonators: a microwave LC resonator capacitively coupled to two optical resonators using the electro-optic effect. The device creates hybridized optical modes in the transducer that enables a resonance-enhanced exchange of energy between the microwave and optical modes.
The transducer uses a process known as difference frequency generation to create a new frequency output from two input frequencies. The optical modes â an optical pump in a classical red-pumping regime and an optical idler â interact to generate a microwave signal at the qubit frequency, in the form of a shaped, symmetric single microwave photon.
This microwave signal is then transmitted from the transducer to a superconducting qubit (in the same refrigerator system) using a coaxial cable. The qubit is coupled to a readout resonator that enables its state to be read by measuring the transmission of a readout pulse.
The MOQT operated with a peak conversion efficiency of 1.18% (in both microwave-to-optical and optical-to-microwave regimes), low microwave noise generation and the ability to drive Rabi oscillations in a superconducting qubit. Because of the low noise, the researchers state that stronger optical-pump fields could be used without affecting qubit performance.
Having effectively demonstrated the ability to control superconducting circuits with optical light, the researchers suggest a number of future improvements that could increase the device performance by orders of magnitude. For example, microwave and optical coupling losses could be reduced by fabricating a single-ended microwave resonator directly onto the silicon wafer instead of on silica. A flux tuneable microwave cavity could increase the optical bandwidth of the transducer. Finally, the use of improved measurement methods could improve control of the qubits and allow for more intricate gate operations between qubit nodes.
The researchers suggest this type of device could be used for networking superconductor qubits when scaling up quantum systems. The combination of this work with other research on developing optical readouts for superconducting qubit chips âprovides a path towards forming all-optical interfaces with superconducting qubitsâŚto enable large scale quantum processors,â they conclude.
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Armed services committees propose $150 billion funding boost for defense

The proposal includes $25 billion for the "Golden Dome" next-generation missile defense initiative, with about $15 billion allocated to satellites, sensors, space-base interceptors and launch infrastructure.
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Long March 3B launches Tianlian-2 (05) satellite to boost space data relay network

China added a new satellite to its geostationary Tianlian data tracking and relay communications satellite series Sunday with its latest launch.
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SpaceNews
- Astrotech wins $77.5 million contract to accelerate pre-launch satellite processing at Vandenberg
Astrotech wins $77.5 million contract to accelerate pre-launch satellite processing at Vandenberg

Astrotech, a Lockheed Martin subsidiary, is the primary provider of payload storage and satellite-processing services for spacecraft at both Eastern and Western ranges.
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A New Quantum Algorithm Speeds Up Solving a Huge Class of Problems
China to lend Changâe-5 moon samples to U.S. universities

China approved international requests, including from two U.S. universities, to borrow small portions of moon samples collected by its Changâe-5 mission.
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What Happens to Our Brains When We Go Through a Digital Detox
Grid-Scale Battery Storage Is Quietly Revolutionizing the Energy System
L3Harris gains edge in race to build Golden Dome missile sensors

The Missile Defense Agency confirmed that L3Harris' Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor (HBTSS) satellite prototype met performance targets in tests.
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Axiom Space names new CEO

Commercial space infrastructure developer Axiom Space has named its chief revenue officer, Tejpaul Bhatia, as its new chief executive.
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GPS disruption and satellite maneuvers now hallmarks of modern warfare

CSIS in its 2025 Space Threat Assessment concludes that space is becoming âa more dangerous place.â
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Volcanic Eruption Warnings Are Now Possible With Fiber-Optic Cables
Some Sharks Bite Humans as a Form of Self-Defense
New Therapy Could Help Heart Tissue Heal After Heart Attack
Meet the Cannibalistic Caterpillar That Dresses in the Bones of It's Prey
NASAâs Perseverance Rover Finds Strange Rocks on Mars
ISS implementation partners need to survive the transition to commercial LEO destinations

The International Space Station has been a hub for human space exploration and research for over two decades, but its operational life is nearing its end, projected around 2030. As [âŚ]
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Could an extra time dimension reconcile quantum entanglement with local causality?
Nonlocal correlations that define quantum entanglement could be reconciled with Einsteinâs theory of relativity if spaceâtime had two temporal dimensions. That is the implication of new theoretical work that extends nonlocal hidden variable theories of quantum entanglement and proposes a potential experimental test.
Marco Pettini, a theoretical physicist at Aix Marseille University in France, says the idea arose from conversations with the mathematical physicist Roger Penrose â who shared the 2020 Nobel Prize for Physics for showing that the general theory of relativity predicted black holes. âHe told me that, from his point of view, quantum entanglement is the greatest mystery that we have in physics,â says Pettini. The puzzle is encapsulated by Bellâs inequality, which was derived in the mid-1960s by the Northern Irish physicist John Bell.
Bellâs breakthrough was inspired by the 1935 EinsteinâPodolskyâRosen paradox, a thought experiment in which entangled particles in quantum superpositions (using the language of modern quantum mechanics) travel to spatially separated observers Alice and Bob. They make measurements of the same observable property of their particles. As they are superposition states, the outcome of neither measurement is certain before it is made. However, as soon as Alice measures the state, the superposition collapses and Bobâs measurement is now fixed.
Quantum scepticism
A sceptic of quantum indeterminacy could hypothetically suggest that the entangled particles carried hidden variables all along, so that when Alice made her measurement, she simply found out the state that Bob would measure rather than actually altering it. If the observers are separated by a distance so great that information about the hidden variableâs state would have to travel faster than light between them, then hidden variable theory violates relativity. Bell derived an inequality showing the maximum degree of correlation between the measurements possible if each particle carried such a âlocalâ hidden variable, and showed it was indeed violated by quantum mechanics.
A more sophisticated alternative investigated by the theoretical physicists David Bohm and his student Jeffrey Bub, as well as by Bell himself, is a nonlocal hidden variable. This postulates that the particle â including the hidden variable â is indeed in a superposition and defined by an evolving wavefunction. When Alice makes her measurement, this superposition collapses. Bobâs value then correlates with Aliceâs. For decades, researchers believed the wavefunction collapse could travel faster than light without allowing superliminal exchange of information â therefore without violating the special theory of relativity. However, in 2012 researchers showed that any finite-speed collapse propagation would enable superluminal information transmission.
âI met Roger Penrose several times, and while talking with him I asked âWell, why couldnât we exploit an extra time dimension?â,â recalls Pettini. Particles could have five-dimensional wavefunctions (three spatial, two temporal), and the collapse could propagate through the extra time dimension â allowing it to appear instantaneous. Pettini says that the problem Penrose foresaw was that this would enable time travel, and the consequent possibility that one could travel back through the âextra timeâ to kill oneâs ancestors or otherwise violate causality. However, Pettini says he ârecently found in the literature a paper which has inspired some relatively standard modifications of the metric of an enlarged spaceâtime in which massive particles are confined with respect to the extra time dimensionâŚSince we are made of massive particles, we donât see it.â
Toy model
Pettini believes it might be possible to test this idea experimentally. In a new paper, he proposes a hypothetical experiment (which he describes as a toy model), in which two sources emit pairs of entangled, polarized photons simultaneously. The photons from one source are collected by recipients Alice and Bob, while the photons from the other source are collected by Eve and Tom using identical detectors. Alice and Eve compare the polarizations of the photons they detect. Aliceâs photon must, by fundamental quantum mechanics, be entangled with Bobâs photon, and Eveâs with Tomâs, but otherwise simple quantum mechanics gives no reason to expect any entanglement in the system.
Pettini proposes, however, that Alice and Eve should be placed much closer together, and closer to the photon sources, than to the other observers. In this case, he suggests, the communication of entanglement through the extra time dimension when the wavefunction of Aliceâs particle collapses, transmitting this to Bob, or when Eveâs particle is transmitted to Tom would also transmit information between the much closer identical particles received by the other woman. This could affect the interference between Aliceâs and Eveâs photons and cause a violation of Bellâs inequality. â[Alice and Eve] would influence each other as if they were entangled,â says Pettini. âThis would be the smoking gun.â
Bub, now a distinguished professor emeritus at the University of Maryland, College Park, is not holding his breath. âIâm intrigued by [Pettini] exploiting my old hidden variable paper with Bohm to develop his two-time model of entanglement, but to be frank I canât see this going anywhere,â he says. âI donât feel the pull to provide a causal explanation of entanglement, and I donât any more think of the âcollapseâ of the wave function as a dynamical process.â He says the central premise of Pettiniâs â that adding an extra time dimension could allow the transmission of entanglement between otherwise unrelated photons, is âa big leapâ. âPersonally, I wouldnât put any money on it,â he says.
The research is described in Physical Review Research.
The post Could an extra time dimension reconcile quantum entanglement with local causality? appeared first on Physics World.
Fine Mars Dust May Pose a Risk to Astronauts' Health
Isaacman calls potential NASA science cuts not âoptimalâ

NASA administrator nominee Jared Isaacman says he would, if necessary, prioritize Artemis over human missions to Mars and calls a potential halving of NASA science funding not âoptimal.â
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China selects international payloads for Changâe-8 lunar south pole mission

China has chosen payloads from a range of international partners to fly on the countryâs Changâe-8 lunar south pole mission, expanding its space diplomacy.
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Solar wind burst caused a heatwave on Jupiter
A burst of solar wind triggered a planet-wide heatwave in Jupiterâs upper atmosphere, say astronomers at the University in Reading, UK. The hot region, which had a temperature of over 750 K, propagated at thousands of kilometres per hour and stretched halfway around the planet.
âThis is the first time we have seen something like a travelling ionospheric disturbance, the likes of which are found on Earth, at a giant planet,â says James OâDonoghue, a Reading planetary scientist and lead author of a study in Geophysical Research Letters on the phenomenon. âOur finding shows that Jupiterâs atmosphere is not as self-contained as we thought, and that the Sun can drive dramatic, global changes, even this far out in the solar system.â
Jupiterâs upper atmosphere begins hundreds of kilometres above its surface and has two components. One is a neutral thermosphere composed mainly of molecular hydrogen. The other is a charged ionosphere comprising electrons and ions. Jupiter also has a protective magnetic shield, or magnetosphere.
When emissions from Jupiterâs volcanic moon, Io, become ionized by extreme ultraviolet radiation from the Sun, the resulting plasma becomes trapped in the magnetosphere. This trapped plasma then generates magnetosphere-ionosphere currents that heat the planetâs polar regions and produce aurorae. Thanks to this heating, the hottest places on Jupiter, at around 900 K, are its poles. From there, temperatures gradually decrease, reaching 600 K at the equator.
Quite a different temperature-gradient pattern
In 2021, however, OâDonoghue and colleagues observed quite a different temperature-gradient pattern in near-infrared spectral data recorded by the 10-metre Keck II telescope in Hawaii, US, during an event in 2017. When they analysed these data, they found an enormous hot region far from Jupiterâs aurorae and stretching across 180° in longitude â half the planetâs circumference.
âAt the time, we could not definitively explain this hot feature, which is roughly 150 K hotter than the typical ambient temperature of Jupiter,â says OâDonoghue, âso we re-analysed the Keck data using updated solar wind propagation models.â
Two instruments on NASAâs Juno spacecraft were pivotal in the re-analysis, he explains. The first, called Waves, can measure electron densities locally. Its data showed that these electron densities ramped up as the spacecraft approached Jupiterâs magnetosheath, which is the region between the planetâs magnetic field and the solar wind. The second instrument was Junoâs magnetometer, which recorded measurements that backed up the Waves-based analyses, OâDonoghue says.
A new interpretation
In their latest study, the Reading scientists analysed a burst of fast solar wind that emanated from the Sun in January 2017 and propagated towards Jupiter. They found that a high-speed stream of this wind arrived several hours before the Keck telescope recorded the data that led them to identify the hot region.
âOur analysis of Junoâs magnetometer measurements also showed that this spacecraft exited the magnetosphere of Jupiter early,â says OâDonoghue. âThis is a strong sign that strong solar winds probably compressed Jupiterâs magnetic field several hours before the hot region appeared.
âWe therefore see the hot region emerging as a response to solar wind compression: the aurorae flared up and heat spilled equatorward.â
The result shows that the Sun can significantly reshape the global energy balance in Jupiterâs upper atmosphere, he tells Physics World. âThat changes how we think about energy balance at all giant planets, not just Jupiter, but potentially Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and exoplanets too,â he says. âIt also shows that solar wind can trigger complex atmospheric responses far from Earth and it could help us understand space weather in general.â
The Reading researchers say they would now like to hunt for more of these events, especially in the southern hemisphere of Jupiter where they expect a mirrored response. âWe are also working on measuring wind speeds and temperatures across more of the planet and at different times to better understand how often this happens and how energy moves around,â OâDonoghue reveals. âUltimately, we want to build a more complete picture of how space weather shapes Jupiterâs upper atmosphere and drives (or interferes) with global circulation there.â
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Researcher of 1918 flu virus takes over NIAID
NASA cancels lease for Earth science office in New York

NASA is canceling the lease for the offices of a branch of the Goddard Space Flight Center in New York that does Earth science research.
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Webinar: SpaceX â 2025 Business Outlook

Join us on May 6 for a timely discussion on those challenging Starlink and the push for multi-orbit and multi-operator solutions.
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Whatâs Going On Inside Your Brain When Your Mind Goes Blank?
Carbon-Rich Meteorites Lose Their Shock Value After Exploding On Impact
OroraTech opens US office to expand wildfire monitoring network

German satellite operator OroraTech opened its U.S. headquarters in Denver, Colorado, April 24 to push its growing wildfire-monitoring constellation into a country that regularly experiences some of the worldâs most costly fires.
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Female Bonobos Ferociously Team Up To Assert Dominance Over Males
Quantum Communication Milestone Could Pave Way for Faster, More Secure Internet
Childhood Bacteria Exposure Linked to Early Cancer Risk
The Inouye Solar Telescope Can Now Visualize Eruptions on the Sunâs Surface
113-Million-Year-Old Hell Ant Fossil Breaks Age Record for Such Insects
Vaccine experts band together to counter U.S. government misinformation
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Science Magazine
- âA huge honorâ: China reveals the foreign scientists awarded rare lunar samples