Why is Russia launching a new module to the space station if it’s pulling out?

Nauka will be the largest module the Russians have sent to the ISS.

The Russian space corporation, Roscosmos, released photos on Monday showing the much-anticipated Nauka space station module enclosed in its payload fairing. This will be Russia's first significant addition to the International Space Station in more than a decade, and it will provide the Russians with their first module dedicated primarily to research. "Nauka" means science in Russian.

This is a sizable module, including crew quarters, an airlock for scientific experiments, and much more. With a mass of about 24 metric tons, it is about 20 percent larger than the biggest Russian segment of the station, the Zvezda service module.

The timing for this launch, scheduled for as early as July 15 on a Proton rocket, is notable. For one, the multi-purpose Nauka module is more than a dozen years late due to a lack of budget for the project on top of technical issues. At times, it seemed like the module was never actually going to launch.

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Linux: Kernel 5.13 ist fertig

Der neue Linux-Kernel ist nach nur 7 Release Candidates fertig und kommt mit M1, Landlock und CFI. Ein Bericht von Kristian Kißling und Boris Mayer (Linux-Kernel, Wimax)

Der neue Linux-Kernel ist nach nur 7 Release Candidates fertig und kommt mit M1, Landlock und CFI. Ein Bericht von Kristian Kißling und Boris Mayer (Linux-Kernel, Wimax)

Intel Xeon: Sapphire Rapids setzt auf Stapelspeicher

Intels Xeon wird Chiplets und High Bandwidth Memory verwenden. Passend dazu wurde der Supercomputer-Beschleuniger Ponte Vecchio gestartet. (Xeon, Prozessor)

Intels Xeon wird Chiplets und High Bandwidth Memory verwenden. Passend dazu wurde der Supercomputer-Beschleuniger Ponte Vecchio gestartet. (Xeon, Prozessor)

Qualcomm does the bare minimum for the new Snapdragon 888 Plus SoC

Five percent faster peak CPU clock and ambiguous AI improvements launch a new SKU.

Qualcomm does the bare minimum for the new Snapdragon 888 Plus SoC

Enlarge (credit: Qualcomm)

Qualcomm has announced the mid-cycle update to the Snapdragon 888, the Snapdragon 888 Plus. As usual, this is the exact same chip as the previous version that hit the market in February, just with a faster clock rate. Those looking for a serious—or even noticeable—upgrade will be disappointed. This is the smallest "Plus" upgrade Qualcomm has ever done.

Qualcomm says the Prime CPU core—one of the chip's eight cores—can now hit 3.0 GHz, which is a five percent improvement over the 2.84 GHz of the base chip. After the Prime core (which handles things like foreground processing and main thread duties), the three "medium" and four "small" cores remain unchanged.

The company also mentioned that the "AI Engine" is now 20 percent faster. This is a nebulous measurement of how the entire phone—CPU, GPU, DSP, and software—processes AI tasks. It's not a single concrete object you can point to that has been clocked higher, and good luck tying overhyped AI performance to any actual performance improvements in the real world.

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Tuxedo Stellaris 15 is a Linux gaming laptop with Intel or AMD processors, NVIDIA graphics

Linux PC company Tuxedo Computers is taking orders for a new gaming laptop called the Tuxedo Stellaris 15 Gen 3. It’s a 4.9 pound notebook with up to a 2560 x 1440 pixel display featuring a high refresh rate, support for up to a 150-watt NVIDIA …

Linux PC company Tuxedo Computers is taking orders for a new gaming laptop called the Tuxedo Stellaris 15 Gen 3. It’s a 4.9 pound notebook with up to a 2560 x 1440 pixel display featuring a high refresh rate, support for up to a 150-watt NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 GPU. It’s also available with three […]

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Newly discovered supernova may be same type as the one observed in 1054

SN 2018zd meets all the criteria for an “electron-capture” supernova.

Las Cumbres Observatory and Hubble Space Telescope color composite of the electron-capture supernova 2018zd (the large white dot on the right) and the host starburst galaxy NGC 2146 (toward the left).

Enlarge / Las Cumbres Observatory and Hubble Space Telescope color composite of the electron-capture supernova 2018zd (the large white dot on the right) and the host starburst galaxy NGC 2146 (toward the left). (credit: NASA/STSCI/J. Depasquale; Las Cumbres Observatory)

Around July 4, 1054, Chinese astronomers recorded a "guest star" that shone so brightly, it was visible in broad daylight for 23 days. The remnants of that long-ago supernova now form the Crab Nebula, which has long been of great interest to astronomers. Some have hypothesized that SN 1054 (as it is now known) was a new, rare type of supernova first described by a physicist some 40 years ago. A team of astronomers has now identified a second recent supernova—dubbed SN 2018zd—that meets all the criteria for this new type, according to a new paper published in the journal Nature Astronomy, thereby providing a vital missing link in our knowledge of stellar evolution.

"The term 'Rosetta Stone' is used too often as an analogy when we find a new astrophysical object, but in this case I think it is fitting," said co-author Andrew Howell of Las Cumbres Observatory (LCO). "This supernova is literally helping us decode thousand-year-old records from cultures all over the world. And it is helping us associate one thing we don't fully understand, the Crab Nebula, with another thing we have incredible modern records of, this supernova. In the process it is teaching us about fundamental physics: how some neutron stars get made, how extreme stars live and die, and about how the elements we're made of get created and scattered around the universe."

There are two types of known supernova, depending on the mass of the original star. An iron-core collapse supernova occurs with massive stars (greater than ten solar masses), which collapse so violently that it causes a huge, catastrophic explosion. The temperatures and pressures become so high that the carbon in the star's core begins to fuse. This halts the core's collapse, at least temporarily, and this process continues, over and over, with progressively heavier atomic nuclei. (Most of the heavy elements in the periodic table were born in the intense furnaces of exploding supernovae that were once massive stars.) When the fuel finally runs out entirely, the (by then) iron core collapses into a black hole or a neutron star.

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