DAILY INNOVATION BRIEF by Maryanne Kane, Journalist
DAILY INNOVATION BRIEF
By Journalists Edward Kane & Maryanne Kane
NEW SCIENCE ON FIREFLIES: VERY CHALLENGED & DISAPPEARING
Stock
- One of the top wonders of nature is the sight of fireflies lighting up the woods at night. A comprehensive new study finds a growing number of Climate Change and human threats are putting the survival of the species to the test and progressively dimming their lights. Here are some key facts:
- Comprehensive research by University of Kentucky, Penn State, Bucknell & the US Dept. of Agriculture shows a precarious situation for fireflies in North America
- Their decline is alarming
- The threats to them are numerous:
- Climate Change causing heat and severe weather
- Overly dry and overly wet weather
- Artificial light from streetlights, signs and buildings
- Agricultural practices using pesticides & herbicides
- Urban sprawl costing them their habitats
- The scientists used 24,000 field surveys from citizens groups and advanced, machine learning analytics
- Their recommended solutions: reduce light pollution, preserve natural habitats, implement wildlife-friendly agricultural practices
- Why is this so important? - loss of the firefly population would cause broad ecological disruptions, including to other species... and the loss of a natural wonder for all of us to enjoy.
"SON OF CONCORDE" SET TO BREAK THE SOUND BARRIER
- Boom Supersonic's SST is known as the "Son of Concorde". It's designed to fly from New York City to London in 3.5 hours or Tokyo to Seattle in 4 hours. Boom's test jet XB-1 is now cleared to break the sound barrier in a major new test flight. Here are the facts:
- The FAA just gave Denver-based Boom the go-ahead for their supersonic XB-1 to fly over Mach 1
- The supersonic flight will demonstrate the plane's fuel consumption, speed and flight characteristics
- It will perform 10 to 20 subsonic flights before going supersonic
- Boom's top priorities:
- Through supersonic flights they hope to verify the jet's innovative technologies
- Build a full-scale, 100-passenger version to be called Overture
- Target Overture for flying at Mach 1.7
- Deliver orders for Overtures from United and American Airlines
- Go commercial with passenger flights in 2030
Comments
Post a Comment