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A four-member SpaceX Crew Dragon team, including a Russian cosmonaut and the first Native American woman sent to orbit, safely docked with the International Space Station (ISS) on Thursday and moved aboard to begin a five-month science mission.

Rendezvous of the latest NASA expedition to the orbiting laboratory came just after 5 EDT (2:30am IST) following a 29-hour flight to the ISS as the two vehicles circled the globe some 420 km above Earth off the west coast of Africa, according to a NASA webcast of the docking.

The autonomously flying Crew Dragon capsule, dubbed Endurance, was lofted into orbit on Wednesday atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida.

The crew consists of two American NASA astronauts – flight commander Nicole Aunapu Mann, 45, and pilot Josh Cassada, 49 – as well as Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata, 59, a veteran of four previous spaceflights, and cosmonaut Anna Kikina, 38, the first Russian aboard an American spacecraft in 20 years.

The inclusion of Kikina, the lone female cosmonaut in active service with the Russian space agency Roscosmos, was a sign of continued US-Russian cooperation in space despite escalating tensions between Moscow and Washington over the war in Ukraine.

Kikina joined the SpaceX Crew-5 flight under a new ride-sharing agreement signed in July between NASA and Roscosmos allowing the two countries to keep flying on each other’s spacecraft to and from ISS.

The team was led by Mann, the first indigenous woman NASA has sent to space and the first woman to take the commander’s seat of a SpaceX Crew Dragon. Mann, a US Marine Corps colonel and combat fighter pilot, is also among the first group of 18 astronauts selected for NASA’s upcoming Artemis missions aimed at returning humans to the moon later this decade.

“We look forward to getting to work,” Mann radioed moments after the linkup was completed.

On arrival, the Endurance crew spent nearly two hours conducting a series of standard procedures, such as leak checks and pressurizing the chamber between the capsule and ISS, before opening the entry hatches.

A live NASA video feed showed the smiling new arrivals weightlessly floating headfirst through the padded passageway one by one into the station.

They were greeted with hugs and handshakes by the four-member team they are replacing – three Americans and the Italian station commander, Samantha Cristoforetti – as well as by two Russians and a fourth NASA astronaut who shared a Soyuz flight to the ISS last month.

“A lot of people are working hard to make sure our common manned space exploration will continue to exist, to develop further. We are living proof of this,” Kikina said in Russian remarks translated to English through a mission-control interpreter during a brief welcoming ceremony.

The Endurance crew marked the fifth full-fledged ISS team NASA has flown aboard a SpaceX capsule since the private rocket venture founded by Tesla CEO Elon Musk began sending US astronauts to space in May 2020.

SpaceX has flown eight crewed missions to orbit in all, including non-NASA flights.

The new arrivals are set to conduct more than 200 experiments during their 150-day mission, many focused on medical research ranging from 3-D “bio-printing” of human tissue to a study of bacteria cultured in microgravity.

ISS, spanning the length of a football field, has been continuously occupied since 2000, operated by a US-Russian-led partnership that includes Canada, Japan and 11 European countries.

© Thomson Reuters 2022


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Quantum Breakthrough: CSIRO Uses 5-Qubit Model to Enhance Chip Design

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Quantum Breakthrough: CSIRO Uses 5-Qubit Model to Enhance Chip Design

Researchers at Australia’s CSIRO have achieved a world-first demonstration of quantum machine learning in semiconductor fabrication. The quantum-enhanced model outperformed conventional AI methods and could reshape how microchips are designed. The team focused on modeling a crucial—but hard to predict—property called “Ohmic contact” resistance, which measures how easily current flows where metal meets a semiconductor.

They analysed 159 experimental samples from advanced gallium nitride (GaN) transistors (known for high power/high-frequency performance). By combining a quantum processing layer with a final classical regression step, the model extracted subtle patterns that traditional approaches had missed.

Tackling a difficult design problem

According to the study, the CSIRO researchers first encoded many fabrication variables (like gas mixtures and annealing times) per device and used principal component analysis (PCA) to shrink 37 parameters down to the five most important ones. Professor Muhammad Usman – who led the study – explains they did this because “the quantum computers that we currently have very limited capabilities”.

Classical machine learning, by contrast, can struggle when data are scarce or relationships are nonlinear. By focusing on these key variables, the team made the problem manageable for today’s quantum hardware.

A quantum kernel approach

To model the data, the team built a custom Quantum Kernel-Aligned Regressor (QKAR) architecture. Each sample’s five key parameters were mapped into a five-qubit quantum state (using a Pauli-Z feature map), enabling a quantum kernel layer to capture complex correlations.

The output of this quantum layer was then fed into a standard learning algorithm that identified which manufacturing parameters mattered most. As Usman says, this combined quantum–classical model pinpoints which fabrication steps to tune for optimal device performance.

In tests, the QKAR model beat seven top classical algorithms on the same task. It required only five qubits, making it feasible on today’s quantum machines. CSIRO’s Dr. Zeheng Wang notes that the quantum method found patterns classical models might miss in high-dimensional, small-data problems.

To validate the approach, the team fabricated new GaN devices using the model’s guidance; these chips showed improved performance. This confirmed that the quantum-assisted design generalized beyond its training data.

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Metamaterial Breaks Thermal Symmetry, Enables One-Way Heat Emission

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Metamaterial Breaks Thermal Symmetry, Enables One-Way Heat Emission

Researchers have found that a metamaterial, a stack of InGaAs semiconductor layers, can emit significantly more mid-infrared radiation than it absorbs. When this sample was heated (~540 K) in a 5-tesla magnetic field, it exhibited a record nonreciprocity of 0.43 (about twice the previous best). In other words, it strongly violates Kirchhoff’s law and forces heat to flow one way. This demonstration of strong nonreciprocal thermal emission could enable devices like one-way thermal diodes and improve technologies like solar thermophotovoltaics and heat management.

According to the published study, the new device is made from five ultra-thin layers of a semiconductor called indium gallium arsenide, each 440 nanometers thick. The layers were gradually doped with more electrons as they went deeper and were placed on a silicon base. The researchers then heated the material to about 512°F and applied a strong magnetic field of 5 teslas. Under these conditions, the material emitted 43% more infrared light in one direction than it absorbed—a strong sign of nonreciprocity. This effect was about twice as strong as in earlier studies and worked across many angles and infrared wavelengths (13 to 23 microns).

By providing a one-way flow of heat, the metamaterial would serve as a thermal transistor or diode. It could enhance solar thermophotovoltaics by sending waste heat to energy-harvesting cells and aid in controlling heat in sensing and electronics. It has potential implications for energy harvesting, thermal control, and new heat devices

Challenging Thermal Symmetry

Kirchhoff’s law of thermal radiation (1860) states that at thermal equilibrium, a material’s emissivity equals its absorptivity at each wavelength and angle. Practically, this reciprocity means a surface that strongly emits infrared will absorb it equally well.

Breaking this symmetry requires violating time-reversal symmetry, such as by applying a magnetic field to a magneto-optical material. For example, a 2023 study showed that a single layer of indium arsenide (InAs) in a ~1 T magnetic field could produce nonreciprocal thermal emission. However, that effect was extremely weak and worked only at specific wavelengths and angles. Till now, magneto-optical designs have achieved only tiny emission–absorption imbalances under very restrictive conditions. The new achievement demonstrates that man-made materials can produce one-way thermal emitters.

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NASA TEMPO Satellite to Continue Tracking Pollution Hourly from Space Until 2026

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NASA TEMPO Satellite to Continue Tracking Pollution Hourly from Space Until 2026

The tropospheric mission of NASA was launched in 2023 to monitor pollution. It was abbreviated as TEMPO and has revolutionised the scientists’ observation of the air quality from space. It was located around 22,000 miles above the Earth, and it uses a spectrometer to collect daytime air quality data on an hourly basis over North America. It covers small areas within a few square miles and significantly advances technologies, offering only one-time readings per day. This mission was successful within 20 months at its prime phase from June 19, 2025, and is now extended till September 2026 because of the exceptional quality of the data.

TEMPO Tracks the Air Quality

As per NASA, TEMPO keeps a track of the pollutants such as nitrogen oxides, formaldehyde, and ozone in the troposphere, which is the lowest atmospheric layer. This layer gets triggered by the power plants, vehicle emissions, dust, smog, and wildfire smoke. It gives hourly data rather than once a day, said Laura Judd, a researcher at NASA. Through this, we get to know about the emissions change over time. Further, how to monitor smog in the city or wildfire smoke. Such a real-life incident helps astronomers understand the evolution of air pollution in detail.

The major milestone during this mission was to get sub-three-hour data, which allows quicker air quality alerts. This enhances the decision-making and helps the first responders, said the lead data scientist at NASA’s Atmospheric Science Data Centre, Hazem Mahmoud. With over 800 users, TEMPO has passed two petabytes of data downloads in a year. It proves the immense value of the health researchers and air quality forecasters.

NASA’s Collaboration with NOAA and SAO

NASA worked together with NOAA and the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, the former producing the aerosol products for distinguishing smoke from dust and analysing the concentration. As per Xiong Liu, the principal investigator, these datasets enhance the forecast of pollution, improve the models, and support public alerts at the time of peak emissions.

NASA’s Earth Venture Instrument program is running the TEMPO mission and a global constellation of air monitors, along with GEMS of South Korea and Sentinel-4 of ESA. The formal mission review this and evaluate the progress, inform future space-based air quality efforts, and be helpful in refining the goals.

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