DTN 128: The Nuclear Battery Revival
Plus: Martian metals, Starship success, China's growing brain-computer interface industry, AI-simulated disasters, oxygen made in space, transplanting pig lungs, and more.


The Unlikely Revival of Nuclear Batteries
“The allure of nuclear batteries is still their extraordinarily long life-spans: several decades and, with proper fuel choice, possibly centuries. They could also deliver more energy in packages that weigh less than those of chemical batteries. The question is, who’s going to buy them?…The technology works, it has many advantages over chemical batteries, and it can be utilized safely. But what very few companies have been able to do is find a new market for these batteries and make a product that has an impact. Part of the problem is that there is no good solution to the need to track these sources and make sure they are disposed of properly at the end of the battery’s life.”

- Flying cameras are snapping photos of houses for insurers. Will a California bill help homeowners see them?
- U.S. government takes 10% stake in Intel
- Waymo approved to start autonomous vehicle testing in New York City
- China is building a brain-computer interface industry
- SpaceX notches major wins during 10th Starship test
- The AI hype index: AI-designed antibiotics show promise
- China, Russia, and U.S. race to develop lunar nuclear reactors
- Pentagon R&D chief: defense needs to expand industrial base
- Why forward-looking data center operators are taking control of their own grids
- Verily is closing its medical device program as Alphabet shifts more resources to AI
- Japan launches its first homegrown quantum computer
- Why China is leading perovskite solar commercialization
- IBM and NASA develop a digital twin of the sun to predict future solar storms
- York Space delivers 21 satellites for first deployment of U.S. military network
- Electromagnetic weapon zaps drone swarm in seconds
- Is the AI bubble too big to fail?


Researchers gave these succulents in the Echevaria genus a glow up by injecting them with luminescent particles. Image: Liu et al./Matter
Researchers in China created bioluminescent plants by injecting succulent leaves with phosphor particles containing strontium aluminate. This glow-in-the-dark effect is created by the particles ability to absorb energy from light at one wavelength, store it, and gradually re-emit it at a different wavelength for several hours. One material the scientists injected into the succulents absorbed ultraviolet and blue light, and re-emitted it as green light. Compared to genetically engineered bioluminescent plants, phosphor injected plants span a wide variety of colors and hues. The scientists have applied for a patent on their technology with the hopes it can be used as a “living light system” capable of replacing light bulbs. (via Scientific American)

- Physics-inspired computer architecture solves complex optimization problems
- How to make metals from Martian dirt
- In a first, pig lung survives and functions—briefly—in a person
- An AI simulation of a Mount Fuji eruption is being used to prepare Tokyo for the worst
- Chinese astronauts make rocket fuel and oxygen in space
- 3D-printed superconductor achieves record performance with soft matter approach
- Chemists develop four-charge storage molecule to advance artificial photosynthesis
- Robots can now learn to use tools just by watching us
- Two quantum computers with 20 qubits manage to simulate information scrambling
- Clever algorithm enables real-time noise mitigation in quantum devices
- Technology roadmap of micro/nanorobots
- Quantum memory array brings us closer to a quantum RAM
- A generative AI platform for mRNA therapeutics
- Engineers send quantum signals with standard internet protocol
- New laser technique boosts power by individually controlling light modes

- German strike drones startup Stark has raised $62M led by Sequoia
- Grid Aero launches with $6M and breakthrough autonomous cargo aircraft built in 6 months
- Therna Biosciences raises $10M for RNA platform
- Eyebot gets $20M Series A to expand eye care access
- Debut raises $20M to accelerate AI-driven ingredient discovery in skin longevity
- Reprieve Cardiovascular closes a $61M Series B to commercialize its heart failure fluid management system
- Artificial Societies raises $5.3M to make AI-powered social simulations universally accessible
- Leal Therapeutics raises $30M in Series A funding for neuro-metabolic therapies
- Yottar raises $1M in pre-seed to transform site selection process for energy asset developers
- mPower Technology raises over $24M in Series B to boost production of space solar power
- Aerospacelab eyes leading IRIS² manufacturing role after raising $110M
- New research foundation commits $500M to funding 'long bets' in science
- ARPA-E offers funding for magnetic materials and rare-mineral recovery
- Crypto startup M0 raises $40M to build out stablecoin network
- UK’s EnsiliTech raises £4.5M to make vaccines stable at room temperature
- Biotech firm Wugen raises $115M to advance rare cancer drug treatment
- Mid-Atlantic Biotherapeutics raises $50M to develop therapies for neurological disorders
- Nuclear fusion company Commonwealth Fusion Systems raises $863M in Series B2
- Stanford spinout Shenandoah Therapeutics raises $21.5M to turn cancer drivers against themselves
- Rare-earth magnet manufacturer, Vulcan Elements, raises $65M in Series A funding
- Terraton raises $11.5M to scale biochar carbon removal in emerging markets
- VCs bet on AI chips that use light instead of electronics
- Roadrunner Venture Studios partners with New Mexico to build a $25M quantum campus
- Keiron raises €10M to launch world’s first industrialized LiFT printer

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