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These deep sea mushroom-shaped organisms don’t fit in any known subdivision of the animal
kingdom. They’re flat discs and a stalk with a mouth on the end and are kinda like
corals and comb jellies but not exactly so researchers are baffled.
And Airbus is patenting virtual reality sensory isolation headgear which aside from audio
visual components include squirting smells up passengers’ noses. So you can completely
forget you're flying in an airplane.
Vsauce! Kevin here. This is Mind Blow.
Meta augmented reality glasses make science fiction a reality. They use the natural world
as the focus of the computer interface - creating a real-time map of your surroundings and allowing
you to interact with holograms. It’s the first machine to allow two people to view
and interact with digital information from different perspectives while holding eye contact
- so for instance you could play Minecraft with a friend in the same physical space.
The interface is designed by the same guy who did the Iron Man movies and they hope
to implement this in everything from healthcare and engineering to education and gaming. Jake
from Vsauce3 tried them on and said this...
Quant e-Sportlimousine is a spots car that runs on salt water. It has a top speed of
217 mph and uses an electrolyte flow cell power system to power four electric motors.
Electrical power for the drive train is created by using salt water as an electrolyte and
the solution is held in two 200-litre tanks allowing you to drive up to 373 miles on a
single charge. And they just received approval to test it on roads in Europe.
UCLA biologists successfully used a genetic 'remote control' to slow the aging process.
By activating a gene in the nervous system or intestines of fruit flies they can see
the aging process slow and they hope this research can eventually be used to delay the
onset of diseases in humans.
It turns out Stonehenge is way bigger than we thought. Using radar, laser scanners and
magnetometers, researchers uncovered 17 new chapels, ritual shrines, massive pits and
a 108 foot long burial mound containing a gigantic wooden building that they believe
was used for rituals involving dead bodies. These new findings drastically change our
understanding of Stonehenge which was reshaped for hundreds of years beginning in 3100BC.
4MM is a jetpack for runners. Developed at Arizona State University, it enhances human
speed and agility with the goal of allowing any soldier to run a four minute mile. DARPA
asked for assistance in developing augmented ability exoskeletons for able-bodied soldiers
and trials of the jetpack have shown its ability to make users run faster while exerting less
energy.
This shape-shifting architecture concept expands and contracts based on temperature. It uses
Shape Memory Polymer joints connected to plywood to expand the original surface area four times.
The idea is to create architecture that isn’t so rigid and is more attuned to the environment
but they admit real world applications on a large-scale are a ways off.
New ultralight ceramic cubes could be used to build lighter, stronger airplanes, trucks
and batteries. The nanoscale struts can recover from being crushed and they’re light enough
to float through the air. Ceramic usually shatters when dropped due to its weight but
at the nanoscale the material is recoverable from compression - and they’re now working
to apply this nanostructure design to lithium-air batteries.
Finally, Eye Know uses streetlights and time-lapse to create a kaleidoscope of Tokyo.
I’m gonna leave you with smart headlights that can adapt to any conditions at highway
speeds. And as always - thanks for watching.