FAA Reportedly Delegated Oversight of Critical 737 Max Flight System to Boeing

https://gizmodo.com/faa-reportedly-delegated-oversight-of-critical-737-max-1836761865

A 737 Max jet being assembled by Boeing at its Renton, Washington facility in March 2019.
Photo: Ted S. Warren (AP)

A New York Times investigation into the Boeing 737 Max crisis—involving two crashes that killed a cumulative 346 people and the continued grounding of the entire line from global service—has found troubling signs that the Federal Aviation Administration process to guarantee the planes’ safety was fatally flawed and bent to Boeing pressure when it came to potential hazards.

The Times wrote that after “intense lobbying to Congress by industry” resulted in the FAA delegating more authority to manufacturers in 2005, an approach that FAA officials believed would streamline approvals, some staff became concerned that they were no longer able to track what was happening inside Boeing. According to the Times, interviews with over a dozen current and former FAA and Boeing employees have shown that regulators “never independently assessed the risks of the dangerous software known as MCAS [Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System] when they approved the plane in 2017.”

During the 737 Max’s development, the Times wrote, the FAA assigned two engineers to oversee flight control systems at its Boeing Aviation Safety Oversight Office that other staff say were poorly qualified for the roles. An early version of MCAS cleared a Boeing safety review and the system “didn’t prompt additional scrutiny from the F.A.A. engineers,” two FAA officials told the paper. But the FAA delegated further review of the system to Boeing in 2016 even as it made significant alterations to MCAS—which was designed to prevent in-flight stalling but has been implicated as the likely cause of the nose dives detected in the Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines crashes. (A report in Bloomberg on Saturday indicated it is possible the problem is not with MCAS per se, but with other software that activated the system in a scenario where “multiple erroneous data streams in a flight computer… occurred simultaneously.”)

The early version could move the 737 Max’s stabilizer by 0.6 degrees, while the new version could move it up to 2.5 degrees. FAA engineers were left almost totally unaware of this, the Times wrote, and Boeing “assumed” that pilots could correct any malfunction:

When company engineers analyzed the change, they figured that the system had not become any riskier, according to two people familiar with Boeing’s discussions on the matter. They assumed that pilots would respond to a malfunction in three seconds, quickly bringing the nose of the plane back up. In their view, any problems would be less dangerous at low speeds.

So the company never submitted an updated safety assessment of those changes to the agency. In several briefings in 2016, an F.A.A. test pilot learned the details of the system from Boeing. But the two F.A.A. engineers didn’t understand that MCAS could move the tail as much as 2.5 degrees, according to two people familiar with their thinking.

According to the Times, the FAA assumed the “system was insignificant” and further allowed Boeing to remove mentions of it from pilots’ manuals; the FAA “did not mention the software in 30 pages of detailed descriptions noting differences between the Max and the previous iteration of the 737.”

In another example provided by the paper, FAA engineers concluded that the plane’s upgraded engines could pose a risk to cables controlling the rudder if they disintegrated in midair. The FAA acknowledged in a subsequent investigation that the Max “does not meet” its standards “for protecting flight controls,” the Times wrote, but sided with Boeing in 2015 that it would be “impractical at this late point in the program” to compel a change.

In a 2017 report, the paper added, an FAA panel investigating complaints about the issue concluded that Boeing had created “an environment of mistrust that hampers the ability of the agency to work effectively” and that the company had a “vested interest in minimizing costs and schedule impact.”

Additionally, a two-decade veteran of the FAA who was a leading advocate of delegating authority to manufacturers, Ali Bahrami, left the agency in 2013 to take a lobbying role at the Aerospace Industries Association trade group where he urged “maximum use of delegation” to Congress. He returned to the FAA in 2017 as the head of safety, the Times noted.

Boeing denied that the FAA was left in the dark about MCAS in a statement to Business Insider, with spokesman Peter Pedraza saying that “The 737 MAX met the FAA’s stringent standards and requirements as it was certified through the FAA’s processes… The FAA considered the final configuration and operating parameters for MCAS and concluded it met all certification and regulatory requirements.”

According to the Times, an FAA official said that by 2018, the agency was letting Boeing self-certify 96 percent of its own work. After the Lion Air crash, the paper wrote, FAA officials were stunned to learn details of MCAS from Boeing.

The 737 Max line of jets remains on the ground until Boeing is able to have a fix certified by the FAA; it says a software update will be capable of resolving the issue but it is unclear whether hardware solutions will ultimately be required. Southwest has pulled the plane from its roster until next year, while American and United are not anticipating a solution until at least November, according to CNBC.

[New York Times]

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

July 27, 2019 at 07:30PM

‘Quantum microphone’ detects sound at the atomic level

https://www.engadget.com/2019/07/29/quantum-microphone-sound-particles/

Researchers at Stanford have developed a "quantum microphone" which can detect the smallest known units of sound — packets of vibrational energy called phonons. The device could form the basis for even more efficient quantum computers.

Phonons have previously been impossible to measure because traditional microphones are not nearly sensitive enough to pick them up. A microphone works by detecting when a sound wave interacts with a membrane, but the phonons are so small that they can’t be detected individually due to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.

Instead of relying on indirect measurement of sound waves, the scientists built a device which measures the energy of phonons directly using minuscule resonators which act like mirrors for sound. The device can trap the photons and measure the vibrations they cause, with different energy levels corresponding to different numbers of phonons.

The device is described in a paper in Nature, and could be a step towards the creation of a new type of quantum computer. The ability to detect small packets of sound could allow for devices which encode information using sound energy, allowing the storage of massive amounts of data in a small machine.

A phonon quantum computer could be even more compact and efficient than a quantum computer which uses photons, or particles of light, as phonons are easier to manipulate than photons. If scientists can create a quantum computer using phonons, it could store more information in a smaller space than using photons.

"Right now, people are using photons to encode these states. We want to use phonons, which brings with it a lot of advantages," said the lead author of the paper, Amir Safavi-Naeini, an assistant professor of applied physics at Stanford’s School of Humanities and Sciences. "Our device is an important step toward making a ‘mechanical quantum mechanical’ computer."

Source: Stanford, Nature

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

July 29, 2019 at 07:12AM

Android Is Now Unofficially On Nintendo Switch, And It Looks Great

https://kotaku.com/android-is-now-unofficially-on-nintendo-switch-and-it-1836778770

Back in 2018, an exploit was found in the Nintendo Switch that would allow users to run outside code. While that’s of course led to some piracy, it’s also let modders and coders have some fun with the console, up to and including getting Android running on the system, with all the features and tricks that brings along with it.

As this video from xdadevelopers shows, by running Android—off an SD card, you don’t actually install it on the system itself—you can transform your Switch from a Nintendo games console to a multimedia and internet device that will also play a ton of older games via emulation.

Joy-Cons work natively, which is cool, but even cooler is the way the systems seamless docking doesn’t just work for Nintendo titles, but will also work for Netflix as well, running in the dock on your TV and then instantly resuming on the Switch’s screen if you pick it up.

Now for the drawbacks: there’s obviously no GPS, mic or camera, so a lot of Android apps won’t work properly. And there are a few bugs (this is just the very first release version!) like Joy-Con thumbsticks not working in Dolphin, screen rotation being weird and some battery life issues.

If you want to try it out yourself, you can download everything you need here.

via Kotaku https://kotaku.com

July 28, 2019 at 11:53PM

This bicycle is made for pedaling over water

https://www.autoblog.com/2019/07/25/hydrofoil-aquatic-bicycle/

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July 25, 2019 at 07:05PM

Water on the Moon May Be Easier to Reach Thanks to Meteorite Strikes, Solar Wind

https://www.space.com/water-on-moon-kicked-up-meteorites-solar-wind.html

Since the discovery of water on the moon’s south pole about a decade ago, scientists have wondered about the water cycle on the rocky structure’s coldest region. New research provides clues as to how the water may have escaped its icy grave and splattered across the lunar surface.

NASA scientists suggest that elements from the space environment such as meteorites and solar wind that impact the lunar surface may free water molecules trapped in the lunar soil and cause them to bounce off somewhere else, according to a statement by NASA. That could potentially make it easier to reach by future astronauts, researchers said, since explorers wouldn’t necessarily have to venture into the permanently dark craters at the moon’s poles known to host water ice.

“People think of some areas in these polar craters as trapping water and that’s it,” William Farrell, a plasma physicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and lead author of the new study, said in the statement. “But there are solar wind particles and meteoroids hitting the surface, and they can drive reactions that typically occur at warmer surface temperatures. That’s something that’s not been emphasized.”

Related: Photos: The Search for Water on the Moon

Solar wind, the stream of charged particles flowing from the sun, regularly hits the moon and kicks up the water molecules, while meteoroids that impact the lunar surface can hurl small soil particles that contain ice grains as far as 19 miles (30 kilometers) from their original location, according to the study. 

“This research is telling us that meteoroids are doing some of the work for us and transporting material from the coldest places to some of the boundary regions where astronauts can access it with a solar-powered rover,” Dana Hurley, a planetary scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, said in the statement. “It’s also telling us that what we need to do is get on the surface of one of these regions and get some firsthand data about what’s happening.”

One of the bigger mysteries that scientists are hoping to unravel with future moon missions is the lunar water cycle. Nearly 40 years after astronauts first landed on the moon, water was discovered in the moon rock samples brought back by the Apollo missions, dismissing previous beliefs that the moon’s surface was completely barren. 

A gravity map of the moon's southern latitudes overlaid on terrain based on data from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.

A gravity map of the moon’s southern latitudes overlaid on terrain based on data from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. 

(Image credit: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio)

The presence of water outside of the moon’s cold and rough south polar region means astronauts could have better access to water molecules in the lunar soil, which makes studying the moon’s water — and potentially mining the natural resource — a whole lot easier.

Additionally, the primary way scientists currently detect water on the moon is through remote sensing instruments that identify chemical elements based on the light that the lunar surface reflects or absorbs, according to NASA. Therefore, regions of the moon where sunlight is completely absent — like the permanently shadowed craters that contain water — are not exactly ideal for that type of detection.

The latest research also suggests that the space environment is not only moving water around on the lunar surface but could also be adding water to the moon. Chemical reactions between the solar wind and the lunar regolith could create water on the surface, and icy comets that crash into the moon could also boost the moon’s water supply.

“We can’t think of these craters as icy dead spots,” Farrell said.

The study was published July 1 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

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July 24, 2019 at 11:16AM

SpaceX’s Starhopper Rocket Prototype Aborts 1st Untethered Hop Attempt

https://www.space.com/spacex-starhopper-rocket-untethered-hop-abort.html

SpaceX fired up its Starhopper test vehicle for its biggest hop yet Wednesday (July 24), but the rocket aborted the flight just seconds into the attempt. 

Starhopper, a prototype for SpaceX’s Starship program, ignited its Raptor engine for about 3 seconds at the company’s Boca Chica test site in South Texas, but the vehicle failed to lift off. Instead of hopping up about 65 feet (20 meters), the rocket belched flame and smoke, then shut down. 

“It appears as though we have had an abort on today’s test,” SpaceX certification engineer Kate Tice said during a 20-minute live webcast of the Starhopper test. “As you can see there, the vehicle did not lift off today.”

SpaceX's Starhopper test vehicle attempts its first untethered test hop on July 24, 2019 at the company's Boca Chica, Texas test site. The vehicle did not lift off as planned..

SpaceX’s Starhopper test vehicle attempts its first untethered test hop on July 24, 2019 at the company’s Boca Chica, Texas test site. The vehicle did not lift off as planned..

(Image credit: SpaceX)

SpaceX’s Starhopper has performed a tethered test hop in April as well as ground tests of the rocket’s main Raptor engine. Today’s test flight was designed to be the first untethered flight for Starhopper, with its Raptor engine firing at 80% capacity, Tice said. 

“This is a development program,” Tice said. “Today was a test flight designed to test the boundaries of the vehicle.”

More details will be added as they are available. 

You can see SpaceX’s full video of the Starhopper test hop below. 

Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalik. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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July 24, 2019 at 08:29PM