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    ArsTechnica

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      The ISS has been leaking air for 5 years, and engineers still don’t know why

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Officials from NASA and Russia’s space agency don’t see eye to eye on the causes and risks of small but persistent air leaks on the International Space Station.

    That was the word from the new chair of NASA's International Space Station Advisory Committee last week. The air leaks are located in the transfer tunnel of the space station's Russian Zvezda service module, one of the oldest elements of the complex.

    US and Russian officials "don't have a common understanding of what the likely root cause is, or the severity of the consequences of these leaks," said Bob Cabana, a retired NASA astronaut who took the helm of the advisory committee earlier this year. Cabana replaced former Apollo astronaut Tom Stafford, who chaired the committee before he died in March.

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    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia

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    • Ar chevron_right

      The ISS has been leaking air for 5 years, and engineers still don’t know why

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Officials from NASA and Russia’s space agency don’t see eye to eye on the causes and risks of small but persistent air leaks on the International Space Station.

    That was the word from the new chair of NASA's International Space Station Advisory Committee last week. The air leaks are located in the transfer tunnel of the space station's Russian Zvezda service module, one of the oldest elements of the complex.

    US and Russian officials "don't have a common understanding of what the likely root cause is, or the severity of the consequences of these leaks," said Bob Cabana, a retired NASA astronaut who took the helm of the advisory committee earlier this year. Cabana replaced former Apollo astronaut Tom Stafford, who chaired the committee before he died in March.

    Read full article

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    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia

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    • Ar chevron_right

      The ISS has been leaking air for 5 years, and engineers still don’t know why

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Officials from NASA and Russia’s space agency don’t see eye to eye on the causes and risks of small but persistent air leaks on the International Space Station.

    That was the word from the new chair of NASA's International Space Station Advisory Committee last week. The air leaks are located in the transfer tunnel of the space station's Russian Zvezda service module, one of the oldest elements of the complex.

    US and Russian officials "don't have a common understanding of what the likely root cause is, or the severity of the consequences of these leaks," said Bob Cabana, a retired NASA astronaut who took the helm of the advisory committee earlier this year. Cabana replaced former Apollo astronaut Tom Stafford, who chaired the committee before he died in March.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taghuman spaceflight taginternational space station taginternational space station taginternational space station tagnasa tagnasa tagnasa tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagroscosmos tagrussia tagrussia tagrussia

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trust in scientists hasn’t recovered from COVID. Some humility could help.

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Scientists could win back trust lost during the COVID-19 pandemic if they just showed a little intellectual humility, according to a study published Monday in Nature Human Behavior .

    It's no secret that scientists—and the science generally—took a hit during the health crisis. Public confidence in scientists fell from 87 percent in April 2000 to a low of 73 percent in October 2023, according to survey data from the Pew Research Center. And the latest Pew data released last week suggests it will be an uphill battle to regain what was lost, with confidence in scientists only rebounding three percentage points, to 76 percent in a poll from October.

    Building trust

    The new study in Nature Human Behavior may guide the way forward, though. The study encompasses five smaller studies probing the perceptions of scientists' trustworthiness, which previous research has linked to willingness to follow research-based recommendations.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trust in scientists hasn’t recovered from COVID. Some humility could help.

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Scientists could win back trust lost during the COVID-19 pandemic if they just showed a little intellectual humility, according to a study published Monday in Nature Human Behavior .

    It's no secret that scientists—and the science generally—took a hit during the health crisis. Public confidence in scientists fell from 87 percent in April 2000 to a low of 73 percent in October 2023, according to survey data from the Pew Research Center. And the latest Pew data released last week suggests it will be an uphill battle to regain what was lost, with confidence in scientists only rebounding three percentage points, to 76 percent in a poll from October.

    Building trust

    The new study in Nature Human Behavior may guide the way forward, though. The study encompasses five smaller studies probing the perceptions of scientists' trustworthiness, which previous research has linked to willingness to follow research-based recommendations.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Trust in scientists hasn’t recovered from COVID. Some humility could help.

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    Scientists could win back trust lost during the COVID-19 pandemic if they just showed a little intellectual humility, according to a study published Monday in Nature Human Behavior .

    It's no secret that scientists—and the science generally—took a hit during the health crisis. Public confidence in scientists fell from 87 percent in April 2000 to a low of 73 percent in October 2023, according to survey data from the Pew Research Center. And the latest Pew data released last week suggests it will be an uphill battle to regain what was lost, with confidence in scientists only rebounding three percentage points, to 76 percent in a poll from October.

    Building trust

    The new study in Nature Human Behavior may guide the way forward, though. The study encompasses five smaller studies probing the perceptions of scientists' trustworthiness, which previous research has linked to willingness to follow research-based recommendations.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagcovid tagcovid tagcovid taghumility taghumility taghumility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagintellectual humility tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagpublic perception of science tagresearch tagresearch tagresearch tagtrust tagtrust tagtrust

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Valve developers discuss why Half Life 2: Episode 3 was abandoned

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    After Ars spent Half-Life 2 's 20th anniversary week looking back at the game's history and impact , Valve marked the occasion with a meaty two-hour YouTube documentary featuring insider memories from the team behind the game itself. Near the end of that documentary, longtime Valve watchers also get a chance to see footage of the long-promised but never-delivered Half-Life 2: Episode 3 and hear more about what led the project to be abandoned.

    The Episode 3 footage included in the documentary focuses heavily on a new ice gun that would have served as the episode's main new feature. Players would have been able to use that gun to freeze enemies, set up ice walls as makeshift cover, or construct icy ledges to make their way down sheer cliff faces. The developers also describe a so-called "Silver Surfer mode" that would have let players extrude a line of ice in their path then slide along it at slippery speeds.

    The Episode 3 developers were also working on a new, blob-like enemy that could absorb other blobs to grow or split into segments to get around small barriers or pass through grates.

    Read full article

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    • taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Valve developers discuss why Half Life 2: Episode 3 was abandoned

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    After Ars spent Half-Life 2 's 20th anniversary week looking back at the game's history and impact , Valve marked the occasion with a meaty two-hour YouTube documentary featuring insider memories from the team behind the game itself. Near the end of that documentary, longtime Valve watchers also get a chance to see footage of the long-promised but never-delivered Half-Life 2: Episode 3 and hear more about what led the project to be abandoned.

    The Episode 3 footage included in the documentary focuses heavily on a new ice gun that would have served as the episode's main new feature. Players would have been able to use that gun to freeze enemies, set up ice walls as makeshift cover, or construct icy ledges to make their way down sheer cliff faces. The developers also describe a so-called "Silver Surfer mode" that would have let players extrude a line of ice in their path then slide along it at slippery speeds.

    The Episode 3 developers were also working on a new, blob-like enemy that could absorb other blobs to grow or split into segments to get around small barriers or pass through grates.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Valve developers discuss why Half Life 2: Episode 3 was abandoned

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 18 November 2024

    After Ars spent Half-Life 2 's 20th anniversary week looking back at the game's history and impact , Valve marked the occasion with a meaty two-hour YouTube documentary featuring insider memories from the team behind the game itself. Near the end of that documentary, longtime Valve watchers also get a chance to see footage of the long-promised but never-delivered Half-Life 2: Episode 3 and hear more about what led the project to be abandoned.

    The Episode 3 footage included in the documentary focuses heavily on a new ice gun that would have served as the episode's main new feature. Players would have been able to use that gun to freeze enemies, set up ice walls as makeshift cover, or construct icy ledges to make their way down sheer cliff faces. The developers also describe a so-called "Silver Surfer mode" that would have let players extrude a line of ice in their path then slide along it at slippery speeds.

    The Episode 3 developers were also working on a new, blob-like enemy that could absorb other blobs to grow or split into segments to get around small barriers or pass through grates.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taggaming taggaming taggaming taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3 taghalf-life 2: episode 3

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