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Virgin flight u-turns after mid-Atlantic engine failure at 35,000 feet

Virgin flight u-turns after mid-Atlantic engine failure at 35,000 feet The Virgin Atlantic flight departed London on Saturday afternoon and was heading towards Jamaica when one of its engines failed high over the North Atlantic Ocean A Virgin Atlantic plane bound for Jamaica was forced U-turn over the Atlantic Ocean before landing in Ireland after its engine suddenly failed mid-flight. Flight VS165 departed London Heathrow at 4:12pm on Saturday and was almost three hours into the journey...

Daily Mirror 9d ago

Buoys track ocean waves across 14,000 km, from storms in Antarctica to ripples in Alaska

Buoys track ocean waves across 14,000 km, from storms in Antarctica to ripples in Alaska Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor For the first time, mighty ocean waves generated in the Southern Ocean have been accurately measured all the way to the tiny ripples they form on the shores of Alaska. Professor Ian Young, from the University of Melbourne's Department of Infrastructure Engineering, is lead author on a landmark study that analyzed data from 300 drifting ocean buoys...

Phys.org 6d ago

Medicinal plants yield carbon nanoparticles that glow red and flag toxic metals

Medicinal plants yield carbon nanoparticles that glow red and flag toxic metals Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor What do iron, lead and nickel have in common? These heavy metals are an indispensable part of many industries. However, they also share a dark reality: They are serious environmental and public health threats.

Phys.org 2d ago

Google employee charged with using insider data to rig bets on Polymarket

A Google software engineer, Michele Spagnuolo, has been charged by the US Department of Justice for using insider information to rig bets on the prediction market Polymarket. Spagnuolo allegedly profited $1.2 million by betting on candidates who appeared on Google's most-searched list, including an indie pop musician following his arrest.

The Guardian Tech 13d ago

Plants could be used to grow medicines in space, study shows

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Phys.org 2d ago

Analysis:High-profile Instagram AI chatbot breach spotlights security risks of automation

Analysis:High-profile Instagram AI chatbot breach spotlights security risks of automation June 3 : An Instagram hack that saw attackers talk Meta's AI support chatbot into handing over access to high-profile accounts has exposed a critical flaw at the heart of the company's push to automate sensitive user functions. The breach allowed hackers to seize accounts including the dormant Obama White House page, beauty retailer Sephora and a senior U.S. Space Force official. The chatbot was...

Channel News Asia 7d ago

Chip-scale 'acoustic atom' controls sound waves to imitate atomic energy levels and advance computing

Chip-scale 'acoustic atom' controls sound waves to imitate atomic energy levels and advance computing Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. What goes up must come down. Physical laws like these govern all of the natural world—except for the tiny internal components of today's microprocessors, which operate according to the unique and complicated rules of quantum physics.

Phys.org 7d ago

Unicorn in the USA: Indians aren't stealing American jobs, they're building entire HR depts

TOI correspondent from Washington: For a country currently engaged in a vigorous debate about whether immigrants are stealing jobs, swiping opportunities, overwhelming the system, and generally causing western civilization to collapse, the United States has produced a rather awkward statistic. According to a new policy brief by the National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP), immigrants have founded or co-founded 455 of America's 775 unicorns -- the term for a private startup company...

Times of India 5d ago

New discovery upends an 80-year-old theory of turbulence

New discovery upends an 80-year-old theory of turbulence Scientists have found a way to steer the flow of turbulent energy, overturning a long-held rule. - Date: - June 3, 2026 - Source: - University of Pittsburgh - Summary: - Researchers discovered a way to reverse the direction of energy flow in turbulence, challenging a theory that has stood for more than 80 years.

Science Daily 7d ago

Robot fish could unravel how our ancient ancestors first learned to walk

Robot fish could unravel how our ancient ancestors first learned to walk Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Researchers have developed a fish-like robot that shows how some species of modern fish are able to walk on land, and could help unravel how early vertebrates evolved similar abilities hundreds of millions of years ago. Revealing a shared walking pattern Using a combination of their "walking fish" robot and computer models based on observations of real fish,...

Phys.org 8d ago