Space.com on MSN
60,000 feet above Earth, NASA is hunting for the minerals that power phones, EVs and clean energy
AVIRIS-5 is one of the newest tools in a joint research project from NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) called GEMx. The project is designed to search for surface traces of critical minerals, ...
MoistTech Corp., a global supplier of moisture measurement and control, highlights the long-standing sustainability benefits ...
Imaging technology has transformed how we observe the universe—from mapping distant galaxies with radio telescope arrays to ...
From disaster zones to underground tunnels, robots are increasingly being sent where humans cannot safely go. But many of ...
6don MSN
PHOTO ESSAY: Invisible infrared surveillance technology and those caught in its digital cage
When you unlock a phone, step into view of a security camera or drive past a license plate reader at night, beams of infrared light - invisible to the naked eye — shine onto the unique contours of ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
NASA’s new sensor at 60,000 feet tracks critical minerals for phones, EVs, and clean energy
NASA has embarked on an exciting mission to locate critical minerals essential for modern technology and clean energy by deploying cutting-edge sensors at high altitudes. The new AVIRIS-5 sensor, ...
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