One of them is asu, going to the moon to try to locate hydrogen. Right. Why is that important, to try to see where hydrogen deposits might be . Geologically, we arent really sure why theres a lot of deposits of hydrogen at the poles. We understand that the pole sort of wobbles over time and we concentrate water at the poles of any planet that has water on it. But the moon is very dry, from what we know. Passing asteroids or comets might shed off water, and that would sort of get deposited in a blanket uniformly around the moon, and it gets redistributed over time. So you get meteorites that impact on the moon and sort of ballistically shoot the hydrogen around and it ends up in the places that are the coldest. Thats the only place its stable. Those places on the moon are these shadowed craters that are permanently in darkness all the time at the south pole because of the topography down there. As the moon rotates the light never gets in and so we know from about two other missions that
New worker safety regulations meant to log how many hours truckers are on the road may have inadvertently exposed millions of U.S. 18-wheelers to hackers who could take control of entire fleets of vehicles, according to a new Colorado State University paper. Jake Jepson, co-author and graduate research assistant at Colorado State University, said it s important to create guard rails as the nation s transportation networks, power grids, water systems and other critical infrastructure move online. .
As solar eclipse spectators are gathering in the path of totality, teams of students from Maryland and around the nation are preparing to launch instruments to study the phenomenon. This afternoon, dozens of teams participating in the NASA supported Nationwide Eclipse Ballooning Project will launch high altitude weather balloons hauling instruments into the sky to study the eclipse s effect on the atmosphere. A team from the University of Maryland will launch two balloons from a location near Fort Wayne, Indiana. .
Hoosiers running for public office often criticize "the government" despite wanting to be part of it. Research published in "The Conversation," one of the world s leading publishers of research-based news, finds many people misunderstand civil jobs and federal employees are dedicated to serving the public and upholding government integrity. James L. .
An Arizona State University researcher is using artificial intelligence to transform data collected from satellites and other earth observation instruments into information, which could help decision makers become better stewards of the planet. Hannah Kerner, assistant professor of computer science at Arizona State University, noted AI has become a hot-button issue, especially in the areas of consumer products and social media. But Kerner said there are few discussions about how AI can be applied to help combat big adversaries from climate change to poverty and food insecurity. .