DAILY INNOVATION BRIEF by Maryanne Kane, Journalist
DAILY INNOVATION BRIEF
By Journalists Edward Kane & Maryanne Kane
HOT NEW MG EX4
Source: MG
- Iconic British sports car maker MG just revealed, with a quick social media teaser post, its latest car - the all-electric EX4 hatchback which is being headlined as very "hot"
- The EV pays homage to the MG Metro 6R4 Group B rally car of the early 1980's
- EX4 takes MG back to its powerful racing roots
- MG will unveil the hotly anticipated vehicle this weekend at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in the UK and it will compete in the famous uphill climb
- Here's what we expect or know about the EV before the unveiling:
- Dual motor setup with 429 hp and 442 pound-feet of torque
- Massive front splitter
- Big spoiler in back
- Full-width diffuser
- Massive wheels
- We'll learn key specs about the EV this weekend at Goodwood
- MG Motors remains UK based and is currently owned by SAIC Automotive in China, but intriguing reports are circulating that Audi is interested in buying a major stake in MG.
CLIMATE CHANGE IS CHANGING COLOR OF OCEANS
- New research by scientists at MIT and the UK's National Oceanographic Centre has documented that the world's oceans have been changing color, going from a brilliant blue to greener over the past 20 years because of Climate Change
- The color changes are evident in 56% of the world's oceans
- The starkest changes are in ocean waters near the equator which are now much greener
- The scientists say the color reflects new ecosystems - organisms, materials and mostly green phytoplankton
- The scientists used 20 years of ocean color measurement from satellites to document the changes and have computer modeled out to the end of the century
- Research findings co-author Dr. Stephanie Dutkiewicz of MIT says the findings are "frightening and consistent with man-induced changes to our climate"
- Separately new information has come out that ocean waters off Florida are routinely hitting 97-degrees when air temperatures are in the 80's, which is posing a threat to coral off the Florida coastline.
NASA'S NEW SST IS ABOUT TO FLY
- NASA's X-plane, the X-59 QueSST (quiet supersonic technology) is getting ready to start flying
- It's going through engine runs and taxi tests and then will start in a series of test flights
- X-59 has been developed to fly at supersonic speeds of more than Mach 1 or 762 mph without sonic booms, just a quiet thump
- NASA plans to fly the SST over communities, get their reaction to the aircraft's noise level and then, with good levels of acceptance, go to the FAA to re-establish clearance for commercial supersonic plane travel in the US, which has been banned since 1973
- For passengers that would double the speed of air travel and significantly reduce in-the-air travel time
- The X-59 that will test fly is a 1-seat, 100-feet long SST with a cruising speed of Mach 1.4 or 925 mph
- A number of companies like Boom in the US are developing the next-generation of supersonic jets and are also readying for take-off.
For more news stories like this, FLIGHT PATH TO THE FUTURE
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