DeepMind’s AI can control superheated plasma inside a fusion reactor 

https://www.technologyreview.com/2022/02/16/1045470/deepminds-ai-can-control-superheated-plasma-inside-a-fusion-reactor/

DeepMind’s streak of applying its world-class AI to hard science problems continues. In collaboration with the Swiss Plasma Center at EPFL—a university in Lausanne, Switzerland—the UK-based AI firm has now trained a deep reinforcement learning algorithm to control the superheated soup of matter inside a nuclear fusion reactor. The breakthrough, published in the journal Nature, could help physicists better understand how fusion works, and potentially speed up the arrival of an unlimited source of clean energy.

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“This is one of the most challenging applications of reinforcement learning to a real-world system,” says Martin Riedmiller, a researcher at DeepMind.

In nuclear fusion, the atomic nuclei of hydrogen atoms get forced together to form heavier atoms, like helium. This produces a lot of energy relative to a tiny amount of fuel, making it a very efficient source of power. It is far cleaner and safer than fossil fuels or conventional nuclear power, which is created by fission—forcing nuclei apart. It is also the process that powers stars.

Controlling nuclear fusion on Earth is hard, however. The problem is that atomic nuclei repel each other. Smashing them together inside a reactor can only be done at extremely high temperatures, often reaching hundreds of millions of degrees—hotter than the center of the sun. At these temperatures, matter is neither solid, liquid, nor gas. It enters a fourth state, known as plasma: a roiling, superheated soup of particles.

The task is to hold the plasma inside a reactor together long enough to extract energy from it. Inside stars, plasma is held together by gravity. On Earth, researchers use a variety of tricks, including lasers and magnets. In a magnet-based reactor, known as a tokamak, the plasma is trapped inside an electromagnetic cage, forcing it to hold its shape and stopping it from touching the reactor walls, which would cool the plasma and damage the reactor.  

Controlling the plasma requires constant monitoring and manipulation of the magnetic field. The team trained its reinforcement-learning algorithm to do this inside a simulation. Once it had learned how to control—and change—the shape of the plasma inside a virtual reactor, the researchers gave it control of the magnets in the Variable Configuration Tokamak (TCV), an experimental reactor in Lausanne. They found that the AI was able to control the real reactor without any additional fine-tuning. In total, the AI controlled the plasma for only two seconds—but this is as long as the TCV reactor can run before getting too hot.

Quick reactions

Ten thousand times a second, the trained neural network takes in 90 different measurements describing the shape and position of the plasma and adjusts the voltage in 19 magnets in response. This feedback loop is far faster than previous reinforcement-learning algorithms have had to deal with. To speed things up, the AI was split into two neural networks. A large network, called a critic, learned via trial and error how to control the reactor inside the simulation. The critic’s ability was then encoded in a smaller, faster network, called an actor, that runs on the reactor itself.

“It’s an incredibly powerful method,” says Jonathan Citrin at the Dutch Institute for Fundamental Energy Research, who was not involved in the work. “It’s an important first step in a very exciting direction.”

The researchers believe that using AI to control plasma will make it easier to experiment with different conditions inside reactors, helping them understand the process and potentially speeding up the development of commercial nuclear fusion. The AI also learned how to control the plasma by adjusting magnets in a way that humans had not tried before, which suggests that there may be new reactor configurations to explore.

“We can take risks with this kind of control system that we wouldn’t dare take otherwise,” says Ambrogio Fasoli, director of the Swiss Plasma Center and chair of the Eurofusion Consortium. Human operators are often unwilling to push the plasma beyond certain limits. “There are events that we absolutely have to avoid because they damage the device,” he says. “If we are sure that we have a control system that takes us close to the limits but not beyond them, then we can explore more possibilities. We can accelerate research.”

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February 16, 2022 at 10:06AM

Historic sea level rise predicted by NASA and government task force

https://www.space.com/sea-level-rise-foot-2050-climate-change-report-nasa


As climate change continues to progress, so will its effects. In a new collaborative report, NASA and other U.S. government agencies have found that sea levels will rise up to a foot by 2050. 

The report, which comes from a sea level rise task force that includes a number of government agencies including NASA as well as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), has concluded that sea levels along U.S. coastlines will, on average, rise between 10 and 12 inches (25 to 30 centimeters) above today’s levels by 2050. This means that, in just 30 years, ocean height could rise as much as it has risen in the past 100 years. 

This new report includes “the most up-to-date, long term sea level rise projections for all of the United States and Territories,” NOAA Administrator Rich Spinrad said during a news conference Tuesday (Feb. 15), adding that “what we’re reporting out today is historic.”

“The science is very clear,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said during the same news conference, “and that means it’s past time to take action to address this climate crisis.”

Nelson didn’t skirt around the problem and its source, specifying that “the science of the last 20 years has settled the question of human behavior that is driving this climate change.”

Related: Climate change is making Earth dimmer

“It’s important to underscore that this report supports previous studies and confirms what we’ve known all along,” Nelson said. “Sea levels are continuing to rise at a very alarming rate, and it’s endangering communities around the world.”

“Climate change is causing sea levels to rise, ocean surface temperatures to warm and moisture to build in the atmosphere. And all of these facts are leading to more intense and destructive storms,” Nelson added. 

This report is the update to a 2017 report and it forecasts sea levels all the way to 2150. However, this is the first time that the report has projected sea levels just 30 years into the future; earlier reports have only examined the effects over longer timescales. 

“Agencies at the federal, state and local levels use these reports to inform their plans on anticipating and coping with the effects of sea level rise,” a statement from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California reads.

Nelson shared how NASA is working on issues related to climate change.

“NASA is steadfast in our commitment to protecting our home planet by expanding our monitoring capabilities and continuing to ensure our climate data is not only accessible but understandable,” Nelson said in the statement.

“Over the next decade, NASA is going to put up five great observatories … to give us precision in our understanding of what’s happening to the atmosphere, to the ice, to the landmasses and to the waters,” Nelson said.

Nelson highlighted the agency’s Surface Water and Ocean Topography, or SWOT, mission that will “for the first time give us the elevation of our lakes, rivers and streams, in addition to what we know on the elevation of the seas.” NASA is currently planning to launch SWOT in November, using a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. 

He added that the other agencies on the task force, as well as the president’s administration, are serious about continuing to collect important data and working to combat the effects of climate change.

“This administration, the Biden-Harris administration’s response to climate change, it matches this threat,” Nelson said, adding that this moment requires “all hands on deck.”

Spinrad echoed Nelson’s “all hands on deck” sentiment, stating that “This report is a wake up call for the United States, but it’s a wake-up call that comes with a silver lining. It provides us with information needed to act now to best position ourselves for the future. It’s going to take all of us — government, businesses, academia, community citizens — to make a difference in the future.”

Email Chelsea Gohd at cgohd@space.com or follow her on Twitter @chelsea_gohd. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

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February 16, 2022 at 06:09AM

11 ‘Successful’ People Who Were Actually Huge Frauds

https://lifehacker.com/11-successful-people-who-were-actually-huge-frauds-1848544767


Before he was outed as a criminal, few were seen as more respectable or smarter than Bernie Madoff. His is a quintessentially American rags-t0-riches story— except for the part with all the crimes.

The son of a plumber, Madoff founded an investment company at 22, partly with money he’d saved from working as a lifeguard, and climbed the ladder of Wall Street until he was named chairman of the NASDAQ. For decades, rich people begged to be included among the select few he counted as clients, because he was such a genius, he could make money even when the market took a crap!

Except Madoff never invested his clients’ money. He put their deposits in an account, sent falsified returns, and paid any withdrawals with newer investors’ dough. It was an unimaginative, dull-as-dirt Ponzi scheme, notable mainly for its scale: At Madoff’s sentencing, Judge Denny Chin remarked that the accused’s crimes were literally “off the charts,” as federal sentencing guidelines for fraud top out at $400 million in losses. Madoff’s scheme was worth about $64.8 billion. Not bad for a plumber’s son, eh?

via Lifehacker https://lifehacker.com

February 16, 2022 at 10:08AM

Clearview AI Is Working on Augmented Reality Goggles for Air Force Security

https://gizmodo.com/clearview-ai-working-on-a-r-goggles-for-air-force-secu-1848476669


Photo: Chris Jung (Getty Images)

Clearview AI, the shady face recognition firm which claims to have landed contracts with federal, state, and local cops across the country, has landed a roughly $50,000 deal with the U.S. military for augmented reality glasses.

First flagged by Tech Inquiry’s Jack Poulson, Air Force procurement documents show that it awarded a $49,847 contract to Clearview AI for the purposes of “protecting airfields with augmented reality facial recognition; glasses.” The contract is designated as part of the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, meaning that Clearview’s contract is to determine for the Air Force whether such applications are feasible.

The contract isn’t described further, but the most obvious possibility is that the Air Force wants to equip security personnel at its facilities with AR glasses that will enable them to verify on the fly whether someone is or isn’t authorized personnel. This theory dovetails with the way Clearview’s technology already works—users upload pictures into an app that is then compared against the company’s database of faces. Back in 2020, the New York Times reported that Clearview’s app contained code that would allow pairing with AR glasses, theoretically meaning users could walk around identifying anyone whose image had already been obtained by Clearview’s data-scraping operations.

Clearview has been the subject of massive controversy pretty much everywhere it pops up, and for good reason. The Huffington Post reported that its founder, Hoan Ton-That, and other individuals that worked for the company have “deep, longstanding ties” to far-right extremists. Whether Clearview obtained the photos it uses to populate its databases and train its face recognition algorithms legally is also a matter of dispute. Ton-That has bragged that its databases have billions of photos scraped from the public web. While mass-downloading publicly accessible data is legal in the U.S., some states have biometrics privacy laws on the books—most notably Illinois, where Clearview is battling an ACLU-backed lawsuit claiming the company was legally required to obtain the consent of people entered into its database.

In other countries, Clearview has run into more stringent opposition. In May 2021, regulators in France, Austria, Italy, Greece, and the United Kingdom collectively accused it of violating European data privacy laws. Clearview exited Canada entirely in 2020 after two federal privacy investigations, and Canadian privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien said in February 2021 that Clearview’s technology broke laws requiring consent for collection of biometrics and constituted illegal mass surveillance. Canadian authorities demanded that Clearview delete images of its nationals from its database, with Australian regulators issuing similar demands later that year.

Ton-That insisted in an email statement to Gizmodo that the technology being tested with the Air Force does not include access to its troves of scraped images.

“We value the United States Air Force, and their position in defending the nation’s security and interests,” Ton-That wrote. “We continually research and develop new technologies, processes, and platforms to meet current and future security challenges, and look forward to any opportunities that would bring us together with the Air Force in that realm.”

“This particular technology remains in R&D, with the end goal being to leverage emerging capabilities to improve overall security,” he added. “The implementation is designed around a specific and controlled dataset, rather than Clearview AI’s 10B image dataset. Once realized, we believe this technology will be an excellent fit for numerous security situations.”

Face recognition is already being used by cops and the feds. Clearview, for example, has signed contracts with the FBI and U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement. That’s despite current face recognition tech’s reputation for being unreliable, easily abused for racial profiling, and generally invasive. The idea that police could get their hands on goggles that would allow them to run everyone they see against a face recognition database, for example, is pretty dystopian.

The U.S. military has expressed interest in AR for obvious reasons—the many ways in which digital overlays could enhance the productivity, efficiency, and lethality of troops—but the technology is in its nascent stages. The Air Force is currently testing the use of AR goggles to assist in aircraft maintenance training and operations, and it has done proof of concept work related to weapons training and virtual command centers. Last year, the U.S. Army delayed a $22 billion program to equip soldiers with AR goggles, the Integrated Visual Augmentation System (IVAS), saying it wouldn’t be ready for deployment until at least fall 2022.

IVAS is based on Microsoft HoloLens 2 and has been tested since 2019. According to Task and Purpose, it can be used for training, live language translation, face recognition, navigation, providing situational awareness, and projecting locations or objectives. It also contains the kind of high-resolution thermal and night sensors that previously would have been separate gear. Bloomberg reported earlier this month, however, that internal Pentagon assessments have deemed it as nowhere near ready for use in actual combat and only 5,000 goggles have actually been ordered yet. Testing to determine whether soldiers can rely on IVAS in combat scenarios won’t be carried out until May.

An Air Force Research Lab public affairs director didn’t immediately respond to Gizmodo’s request for comment, we’ll update this piece when they do.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

February 3, 2022 at 03:06PM

Amazon is reportedly fast tracking a live-action Blade Runner series

https://www.engadget.com/blade-runner-live-action-series-amazon-182855264.html?src=rss

A few months back, Blade Runner director Ridley Scott said a live-action series set in that universe is in the works. The project looks to be a step closer to reality, as Amazon Studios has reportedly put it in development. Amazon’s TV and film production arm is said to be fast tracking scripts and looking at possible production dates.

The show is called Blade Runner 2099, according to both Deadline and Variety. While no details about the plot have been revealed as yet, the title suggests the show will be set 50 years after Blade Runner 2049, the sequel to Scott’s original film.

Scott is said to be an executive producer and may direct some episodes if the series gets the green light. Silka Luisa, who wrote the upcoming Apple TV+ time-travel thriller series Shining Girls, is reportedly onboard as a writer and executive producer.

It’s still early days for Blade Runner 2099, but the smart money is on Amazon bringing the series to Prime Video. The streaming service has a decent track record when it comes to sci-fi, with shows like The Expanse under its belt. Like Blade Runner, Amazon anthology series Electric Dreams is based on the works of sci-fi author Philip K. Dick.

Another show set in the Blade Runner universe, Blade Runner: Black Lotus, debuted on Adult Swim and Crunchyroll last year, though that’s an anime series rather than a live-action project.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

February 11, 2022 at 12:30PM

Valve releases Steam Deck CAD files allowing anyone to 3D-print custom shells

https://www.engadget.com/valve-steam-deck-cad-files-release-175935793.html?src=rss

With two weeks to go before its February 25th release date, Valve has published CAD files for Steam Deck’s exterior shell to GitLab. Making them available under a Creative Commons license, the company noted the release is “good news” for DIY enthusiasts, modders and most notably, accessory manufacturers. All three groups can use the provided technical drawings and schematics to 3D-print custom shells for the handheld.

As Eurogamer notes, Valve’s decision here is an interesting one. It suggests the company will allow case makers to freely make aftermarket shells for Steam Deck. In fact, Valve said it was “looking forward to seeing what the community creates!” Contrast that to the approach Sony has taken with the PlayStation 5. When Sony’s latest console first shipped and only came in one color, an entire cottage industry of companies sprang up to produce colored plates for the PS5. However, Sony quickly moved to shut down those projects before it went on to announce a set of first-party covers for people to purchase.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

February 13, 2022 at 12:03PM

Don’t blame SpaceX for that rocket on a collision course with the Moon

https://www.engadget.com/spacex-moon-rocket-bill-gray-195744394.html?src=rss

This past January, astronomer Bill Gray said that the upper stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket would collide with the Moon sometime in early March. As you might expect, the prediction set off a flurry of media coverage, much of it critical of Elon Musk and his private space firm. After all, the event would be a rare misstep for SpaceX.

But it turns out Elon and company are not about to lose face. Instead, it’s more likely that fate will befall China. That’s because Gray now says he made a mistake in his initial identification of a piece of space debris he and other astronomers dubbed WE0913A in 2015.

When Gray and his colleagues first spotted the object, several clues led them to believe it was the second stage of a Falcon 9 rocket that carried the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s DSCOVR satellite into deep orbit that same year. The object’s identification would have probably gone unreported in mainstream media if astronomers didn’t subsequently discover it was about to collide with the Moon.

“Back in 2015, I (mis)identified this object as 2015-007B, the second stage of the DSCOVR spacecraft,” Gray said in a blog post he published on Saturday that was spotted Ars Technica. “I had pretty good circumstantial evidence for the identification, but nothing conclusive,” Gray added. “That was not at all unusual. Identifications of high-flying space junk often require a bit of detective work, and sometimes, we never do figure out the ID for a bit of space junk.”

We may have never known the actual identity of the debris if not for NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory engineer Jon Giorgini. He contacted Gray on Saturday to ask about the identification. According to Giorgini, NASA’s Horizons system, a database that can estimate the location and orbit of almost half a million celestial bodies in our solar system, showed that the DSCOVR spacecraft’s trajectory didn’t take it close to the Moon. As such, it would be unusual if its second stage were to stray off course then and hit the satellite. Giorgini’s email prompted Gray to reexamine the data he used to make the initial identification.

Gray now says he’s reasonably certain the rocket that’s about to collide with the moon belongs to China. In October 2014, the country’s space agency launched its Chang’e 5-T1 mission on a Long March 3C rocket. After reconstructing the probable trajectory of that mission, he found that the Long March 3C is the best fit for the mystery object that’s about to hit Earth’s natural satellite. “Running the orbit back to launch for the Chinese spacecraft makes ample sense,” he told The Verge. “It winds up with an orbit that goes past the Moon at the right time after launch.”

Gray went on to tell The Verge that episodes like this underline the need for more information on rockets boosters that travel into deep space. “The only folks that I know of who pay attention to these old rocket boosters are the asteroid tracking community,” he told the outlet. “This sort of thing would be considerably easier if the folks who launch spacecraft — if there was some regulatory environment where they had to report something.”

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

February 13, 2022 at 02:09PM