Daily Archives: March 26, 2022

Reaching for the stars: Salisbury University alumna’s work will travel to Space Station – Delmarva Now

Posted: March 26, 2022 at 6:34 am

Special to Salisbury Daily Times| Salisbury Daily Times

Northrop Grumman Cygnus spacecraft soars to ISS

Northrop Grumman launched its 17th commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station Saturday, carrying 8,300 pounds of supplies. (Feb. 19)

AP

When Salisbury University alumna Kennedy Workman interviews for jobs throughout her graphic design career, she will have a line on her rsum that will set her apart from others: A piece of Workmans work will have traveled into space.

Her mission patch design was chosen as the winner of a competition for Terps in Space, an extension of the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program.

The program allows students in the University System of Marylandto design science experiments to potentially be sent to the International Space Station.

My artwork is not out in a lot of places, but I will be able to say that its been to space, which is incredibly exciting, said Workman.

Based out of the University of Maryland, College Park, the program is led by Daniel Enrique Serrano, senior faculty specialist at the Institute for Physical Science and Technology, and is open to all students.

The project selected to travel to space as part of Mission 16, for which Workmans patch was created, was developed by a collaboration of students from University of Maryland, College Parkand the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

All University System of Maryland students are invited to participate, said Serrano. It means a lot to achieve that collaboration, like the team that won Mission 16, where you have students that are coming from different universities to do research, and for Kennedy to represent our entire mission visually being from a different university. My contribution is small, but it makes me proud to be able to bring these students together.

Workman, from Glenwood, Maryland, and other students in the SU Design Agency, a course led by Allison Seth, were given a brief description of the project and asked to create their version of a representative patch, similar to what one might see an astronaut wear on their spacesuit.

Though no astronaut will wear this patch, it will be sent up with the project expected to travel later this year and then will be returned to Workman with a certificate stating that it traveled to space.

The patch represents the projects basis on microgravity. Researchers will examine the fine details of how planets first began to form by investigating how the smallest particles interact and coalesce to begin forming a larger mass.

I really wanted to utilize an astronaut helmet or an astronaut floating in space to represent the human exploration of space and gravity, said Workman.

I looked at a lot of different pictures of astronauts because I wanted it to feel like they were floating out of the patch design and not too stagnant.

Workman studied spacesuits in images of astronauts and otherillustrations to develop her rendering and received praise from the judges, as her design closely represents what an authentic suit looks like.

More:What changes for Wallops launches to ISS as Russia ends rocket sales to US

One intentional variance was to not have the astronaut in the design wearing gloves, as Workman thought it made it more intimate and human for his bare hands to be holding flowers as he floated in space.

The flowers are part of the designs goal of representing Maryland.

I wanted to incorporate the state flower; thats why the astronaut is holding black-eyed Susans. And they also have the state flag on their astronaut suit, she said.

I tried to keep the color palette with the colors of Maryland and reflect the colors in different areas of the design, like the yellow reflection in the astronauts helmet, and the red stripe on the helmet and the banner around the entire patch design.

Workman was first selected as one of 11 finalists, from 44 designs submitted from across the state, to go to final judging. SU classmate Jennifer Cuevas design was selected as the third-place finisher.

Kennedys patch was one of the most refined and highest quality in terms of visual representation, said Serrano. Her being selected was by a landslide across the board by all the judges as the best design.

The project likely will launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida. Workman would like to be present, if possible, or at least view the launch of her artwork into space remotely.

I think it will be very, very exciting to see it launch, said Workman. I would love to see pictures of the patch on the International Space Station.

More:Rocket Lab chooses Wallops for launch, manufacturing site. Move could create 250 jobs

The SU Design Agency is a 400-level class in which students work in a setting structured like a graphic design firm to complete job assignments for actual clients, including University, community and nonprofit organizations.

The SSEP is a program of the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education = in the U.S. and the Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Space Education internationally. It is enabled through a strategic partnership with Nanoracks LLC, which is working with NASA under a Space Act Agreement as part of the use of the International Space Station as a National Laboratory.

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Prepare to Try to Take Down the Novaquark Space Station in This Dual Universe Event – MMORPG.com

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With the upcoming Athena update on the way, there will be a new PTS event for Dual Universe next week. The event, Fool's Defense, lets you face the Novaquark team at the Novaquark space station. The team is encouraging all comers to try and destroy their space station and test the build.

The event will take place at 1400 UTC/10 AM Eastern time on April 1st and is in fact, not a joke. Join the developers from Novaquark on the PTS server and headto the PVP platform, claimed a ship and ammo and you'll be ready to fight. Once you get equipped and team up, either with your own team or creating public groups, it will be time to coordinate and get ready to take on the dev team. since this is in PvP space, everybody is vulnerable and in the official announcement for the event, the developers also warned that there may be potential sabotage or traitors that might be in the ranks of the community side in order to try and spoil your fun. For those who need it, there will be a resurrection node publicly available at the PVP platform.

The Athena update promises a new system that will let the community engage in war of all kinds, including sieges and defenses. With the development team taking on the community, it may be likely that they'll put in everything they can to test out the systems and stress the servers as well as giving players a rewarding opportunity to get an idea what to expect when the update fully hits.

Speaking of rewarding, anyone that wins will be able to spin a Wheel of Foolish Fortune, where they can get great prizes or intentionally not great prizes. Because an event on April Fool's Day couldnt be all straightforward. For more, see the official announcement over at Dual Universe

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Tensions over Ukraine could affect space co-operation – The Irish Times

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In the coming days a Russian Soyuz capsule is scheduled to leave the International Space Station for Earth, bringing home three personnel who have completed months of duties on the facility.

Two of these heading back to Kazakhstan will be Russian cosmonauts but the third will be American astronaut Mark Vande Hei.

In the midst of a war in Ukraine in which Russian bombs and shells are killing Ukrainian civilians and where US-provided weaponry has killed probably several thousand Russians, co-operation is continuing in space, at least for the present.

The war in Ukraine is not only the most serious crisis in Europe in decades, but the tensions it has generated between the US and Russia may ultimately also have an impact 400km above Earth at the International Space Station.

Almost from its inception about 60 years ago, space exploration has had as much to do with politics as with science, maybe more so.

The race to orbit Earth and later to the moon between the US and the former Soviet Union were as much about showing their own people and the broader world which political system was the most advanced.

However, in more recent years space has been one of the main areas of co-operation between the US and Russia.

The International Space Station project stemmed from an initiative to improve US-Russian relations after the collapse of the Soviet Union and to get away from the cold war rivalry between the two powers that marked the race to be first to the moon in the 1960s.

Even though this new co-operation was tested by Russias annexation of Crimea in 2014, Russian cosmonauts and American astronauts continued to work side by side on the space station.

After the retirement of the US space shuttle in 2011, and until the private Space X firm came on the scene in 2020, the Americans paid handsomely about $4 billion (3.64 billion) for seats on Russian space craft to bring their astronauts to and from the station.

The Americans, Russians, Japanese and others have their own modules or parts of the space station, but these are largely inter-dependent.

While the fallout from the invasion of Ukraine by Russia has the potential to cause serious problems for the space station project, the messages from both sides have been mixed.

Restrictions on high tech exports to Russia introduced by the Biden administration were designed to degrade its aerospace industry. The US space agency Nasa argued, on the other hand, that the measures would not impact on ongoing in-orbit and ground-station operations.

However, Dmitry Rogozin, director general of Russian space agency Roscosmos, denounced the restrictions and warned sanctions could destroy teamwork with the US on the International Space Station.

Rogozin has in recent weeks also been involved in a Twitter spat with one of the USs most famous astronauts of recent times and a strong critic of the Russian war in Ukraine, Scott Kelly, who spent a US record of nearly a year in space.

In one instance Rogozin tweeted a video of technicians taping over the flags of the United States, Japan and other nations on the Soyuz rocket that was supposed to launch 36 internet satellites for a UK-based company.

That launch, scheduled for March 4th, did not happen, because OneWeb and the British government, which owns part of the company, declined to meet new demands imposed by Roscosmos on how the satellites would be used.

Kelly responded to that tweet, writing, Dimon, without those flags and the foreign exchange they bring in, your space programme wont be worth a damn. Maybe you can find a job at McDonalds if McDonalds still exists in Russia.

Rogozin replied in a tweet that was subsequently deleted: Get off, you moron! Otherwise the death of the ISS [International Space Station] will be on your conscience!

In response to western sanctions Russia has also said it will no longer sell rocket engines to US companies. It has also halted launches of Russian-built Soyuz rockets from Europes space port in French Guiana.

At the same time, Nasa has said it and the Russians are still working toward a crew exchange deal under which both would routinely share flights to the space station on each others space crafts.

The revival of tensions akin to the cold war comes as Nasa is planning a return to the moon after a 50-year hiatus.

Americans wont be landing on the moon any day soon. It may be 2025 or 2026 before that happens.

However, the first steps are taking place. Last week Nasa rolled out its new mega rocket known as the Space Launch System at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, essentially as a dress rehearsal ahead of an unmanned launch around the moon later this year.

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Satellites have become smaller and cheaper so even you can now do science in space – The Next Web

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Want to go to space? It could cost you.

This month, the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft will make the first fully-private, crewed flight to the International Space Station. The going price for a seat is US$55 million. The ticket comes with an eight-day stay on the space station, including room and board and unrivaled views.

Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin offer cheaper alternatives, which will fly you to the edge of space for a mere US$250,000-500,000. But the flights only last between ten and 15 minutes, barely enough time to enjoy an in-flight snack.

But if youre happy to keep your feet on the ground, things start to look more affordable. Over the past 20 years, advances in tiny satellite technology have brought Earth orbit within reach for small countries, private companies, university researchers, and even do-it-yourself hobbyists.

We are scientists who study our planet and the universe beyond. Our research stretches to space in search of answers to fundamental questions about how our ocean is changing in a warming world, or to study the supermassive black holes beating in the hearts of distant galaxies.

The cost of all that research can be, well, astronomical. The James Webb Space Telescope, which launched in December 2021 and will search for the earliest stars and galaxies in the universe, had a final price tag of US$10 billion after many delays and cost overruns.

The price tag for the International Space Station, which has hosted almost 3,000 scientific experiments over 20 years, ran to US$150 billion, with another US$4 billion each year to keep the lights on.

Even weather satellites, which form the backbone of our space-based observing infrastructure and provide essential measurements for weather forecasting and natural disaster monitoring, cost up to US$400 million each to build and launch.

Budgets like these are only available to governments and national space agencies or a very select club of space-loving billionaires.

More affordable options are now democratizing access to space. So-called nanosatellites, with a payload of less than 10kg including fuel, can be launched individually or in swarms.

Since 1998, more than 3,400 nanosatellite missions have been launched and are beaming back data used for disaster response, maritime traffic, crop monitoring, educational applications and more.

A key innovation in the small satellite revolution is the standardization of their shape and size, so they can be launched in large numbers on a single rocket.

CubeSats are a widely used format, 10cm along each side, which can be built with commercial off-the-shelf electronic components. They were developed in 1999 by two professors in California, Jordi Puig-Suari and Bob Twiggs, who wanted graduate students to get experience designing, building, and operating their own spacecraft.

Twiggs says the shape and size were inspired by Beanie Babies, a kind of collectible stuffed toy that came in a 10cm cubic display case.

Commercial launch providers like SpaceX in California and Rocket Lab in New Zealand offer rideshare missions to split the cost of launch across dozens of small satellites. You can now build, test, launch and receive data from your own CubeSat for less than US$200,000.

Small satellites have opened exciting new ways to explore our planet and beyond.

One project we are involved in uses CubeSats and machine learning techniques to monitor Antarctic sea ice from space. Sea ice is a crucial component of the climate system and improved measurements will help us better understand the impact of climate change in Antarctica.

Spire Global operates a fleet of more than 110 nanosatellites. Image: Spire Global

Sponsored by the UK-Australia Space Bridge program, the project is a collaboration between universities and Antarctic research institutes in both countries and a UK-based satellite company called Spire Global. Naturally, we called the project IceCube.

Small satellites are starting to explore beyond our planet, too. In 2018, two nanosatellites accompanied the NASA Insight mission to Mars to provide real-time communication with the lander during its decent. In May 2022, Rocket Lab will launch the first CubeSat to the Moon as a precursor to NASAs Artemis program, which aims to land the first woman and first person of color on the Moon by 2024.

A nanosatellite took this photo of Mars. Image: NASA/JPL

Tiny spacecraft have even been proposed for a voyage to another star. The Breakthough Starshot project wants to launch a fleet of 1,000 spacecraft each centimetre in size to the Alpha Centauri star system, 4.37 light-years away. Propelled by ground-based lasers, the spacecraft would sail across interstellar space for 20 or 30 years and beam back images of the Earth-like exoplanet Proxima Centauri b.

With advances in miniaturization, satellites are getting ever smaller.

Picosatellites, the size of a can of soft drink, and femtosatellites, no bigger than a computer chip, are putting space within reach of keen amateurs. Some can be assembled and launched for as little as a few hundred dollars.

A Finnish company is experimenting with a more sustainably built CubeSat made of wood. And new, smart satellites, carrying computer chips capable of artificial intelligence, can decide what information to beam back to Earth instead of sending everything, which dramatically reduces the cost of phoning home.

Getting to space doesnt have to cost the Earth after all.

This article by Shane Keating, Senior Lecturer in Mathematics and Oceanography, UNSW Sydney and Clare Kenyon, Astrophysicist and Science Communicator, The University of Melbourneis republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Shane Keating and Clare Kenyon will be discussing CubeSats and the Space Bridge program at Design beyond Earth: The future of Earth observation, an in-person and online event at Scienceworks in Melbourne on Sunday March 27, 12pm-1pm.

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Within a decade, China intends to offer its Tiangong space station for tourism. – GeeksULTD

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China hopes to pique public interest in space tourism by making its soon-to-be-completed space station available to the general public.

Yang Liwei, Chinas first astronaut in space in 2003, told Chinese media earlier this month that persons without official astronaut training may soon visit the Tiangong space station.

When asked if the general public will be allowed to explore Tiangong, Yang replied, It is not an issue of technology, but of demand. And, if there is sufficient demand, it can be accomplished within a decade.

Yang was addressing as a member of Chinas continuing annual political sessions in Beijing, the Chinese Peoples Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC). Zhou Jianping, the main designer of Chinas human spaceflight programme, subsequently claimed the countrys Shenzhou crew spacecraft might be used for space tourism, lending credence to the remarks.

Taken together, the statements imply that China is attempting to develop a market for space tourism.

READ MORE: BEST SOUNDING VEHICLE EVER? Porsche Cayman GT4 RS 2022

But first, China must finish and operationalize the three-module, T-shaped space station. This year, China intends to send six missions to complete Tiangong. These will be the launches of two new modules, Shenzhou 14 and Shenzhou 15, as well as two cargo supply missions and two crewed missions.

The two three-person missions are also slated to carry out the first crew handover, which will see six astronauts temporarily stationed on the space station.

However, the Shenzhou spacecraft, which will launch from Jiuquan in the Gobi Desert on a proven Long March 2F rocket, will not be the sole option for transporting passengers into space.

According to Space.com, China is developing a reusable rocket for human spaceflight that would be capable of launching a new, bigger, and largely reusable crew spacecraft to the space station. The new method would allow more individuals to go to space at the same time.

Whereas the Shenzhou spacecraft can only carry three astronauts, the new generation of crewed space transportation vehicles will be able to carry six to seven astronauts, according to Huang Kewu, a human spaceflight official with Chinas main space contractor, the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, last year.

Commercial alternatives are also being considered. CAS Space, a commercial offshoot of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), plans to provide tourist journeys to space as early as 2025, citing Blue Origin as inspiration.

Meanwhile, Space Transportation is designing a rocket with wings for space tourism and point-to-point travel, with a maiden suborbital flight scheduled for 2025. Orbital flights are scheduled to begin around 2030.

Last year, Wu Ji, a researcher at the CASs National Space Science Center, told the Beijing Review that he thought Chinese enterprises will be able to compete in the worldwide space tourism industry. Commercial programs may help reduce costs and boost the efficacy of space operations, which would benefit traditional participants in this sector, Wu added.

Chinas first space-tourism planes may not take off for a few years, but the government appears to be committed to providing several means for visitors to reach space.

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Expanding Universe. The Hubble Space Telescope – Taschen

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Hubbles most magnificent images With investigations into everything from black holes to exoplanets, the Hubble Telescope has changed not only the face of astronomy but also our very sense of being in the universe. On the 30th anniversary of its launch into low-earth orbit, this updated edition of Expanding Universe presents 30 brand new images, unveiling more hidden gems from the Hubbles archives.

Ultra-high resolution and taken with almost no background light, these pictures have answered some of the most compelling questions of time and space while also revealing new mysteries, like the strange dark energy that sees the universe expanding at an ever-accelerating rate.

The collection is accompanied by an essay from photography critic Owen Edwards and an interview with Zoltan Levay, who explains how the pictures are composed. Veteran Hubble astronauts Charles F. Bolden, Jr. and John Mace Grunsfeld also offer their insights on Hubbles legacy and future space exploration.

Charles F. Bolden, Jr., Major General, USMC (Ret.), is a former Administrator of NASA, where he oversaw the completion of the International Space Station. He spent 14 years as a member of NASAs Astronaut Corps, and commanded and piloted the Space Shuttle Discovery on STS-31, which launched the Hubble Space Telescope into orbit.

Owen Edwards has written about photography for more than 30 years for numerous publications including American Photographer, New York Times Magazine, and Smithsonian.

John Mace Grunsfeld, PhD, is an astrophysicist and a NASA astronaut. He has flown five times on the Space Shuttle, including three Hubble servicing missions. He has served as the Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate, the NASA Chief Scientist, and as the Deputy Director of the Space Telescope Science Institute.

Zoltan Levay is a retired principle science visuals developer at the Space Telescope Science Institute, where he worked with astronomers and communicators worldwide to publicize science results from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope.

Hardcover with fold-outs, 11.4 x 11.4 in., 5.44 lb, 260 pages

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#SpaceSnap: Hubble Space Telescope’s Photo of the Heart of the Flame Nebula – iTech Post

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The Hubble's Space Telescope captured a spectacular image of a Flame Nebula also known as NGC 2024. Located in the constellation Orion, NGC 2024 is a large star-forming region and is approximately 1,400 light-years away from Earth.

The Flame Nebula recently captured by the Hubble Space Telescope is particularly part of the Orion Molecular Cloud Complex, or popularly known as Orion Complex.

The Orion complex is one of the most active of those visible in the night sky located in the Milky Way.

As reported by NASA, the Flame Nebula captured is in the area where nebulae such as the Horsehead Nebula and the Orion Nebula are also located.

(Photo : NASA, ESA, and N. Da Rio (University of Virginia); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America))NASAs Hubble Space Telescope captures another Flame Nebula.

This image captured by the Hubble Space Telescope focuses on the dark, dusty heart of the nebula, which contains a star cluster that is largely hidden from view by the surrounding dust.

The bright star Alnitak, the easternmost star in the Belt of Orion, is close by (but not visible in this image) and is the brightest star in the constellation. The hydrogen gas in the Flame Nebula is ionized as a result of the radiation from Alnitak.

In order for the gas to transition from a higher-energy state to a lower-energy state, it must first emit energy in the form of light. This causes the visible glow behind the swirling wisps of dust to appear.

Nebulas are large clouds of dust and gas that form in space. Several nebulae are formed by the explosion of a dying star, such as a supernova, which releases gas and dust into space. Other nebulae are regions where new stars are beginning to form, as opposed to the central nebula. Some nebulae are also referred to as "star nurseries" as a result of this phenomenon.

Nebulae are composed of dust and gasses, the majority of which are hydrogen and helium. Although the dust and gasses in a nebula are widely dispersed, gravity has the ability to gradually pull clumps of dust and gas together over time. Since these clumps grow in size, the gravitational pull of the clumps becomes stronger and stronger.

According to NASA's Space Place:"The clump of dust and gas gets so big that it collapses from its own gravity. The collapse causes the material at the center of the cloud to heat up-and this hot core is the beginning of a star."

Read Also: NASA's Space Launch System Rollout a Success! Next Stop: The Moon

NASA'sHubble Space Telescopehas taken numerous images of faraway nebulae. This extremely powerful microscope has been used by astronomers "to measure the mass of stars in the cluster as they search for brown dwarfs, a type of dim object that's too hot and massive to be classified as a planet but also too small and cool to shine like a star."

The Hubble Space Telescope is a large, space-based observatory named in honor of the trailblazing astronomer Edwin Hubble.

The Hubble Telescope has the scientific ability to have a crystal-clear view of the universe. It is located far above rain clouds, light pollution, and atmospheric distortions. Researchers have made use of the Hubble Space Telescope to observe some of the most distant stars and galaxies that have ever been observed, as well as the planets of our solar system.

When the Hubble Space Telescopewas launched into orbit around the Earth, it became the world's first astronomical observatory to be equipped with the capability of recording images in wavelengths of light ranging from ultraviolet to near-infrared.

Related Article: NASA Mars Rover Pictures: Perseverance Snaps Out-of-Place Photo of Drill Bit From 2021!

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Junk DNA may rein in memories tied to fear – Futurity: Research News

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A piece of junk DNA could be the key to extinguishing fear-related memories for people struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder and phobia, according to a new study.

Researchers discovered the new gene while investigating how the genome responds to traumatic experiences.

Its like harnessing the power of the Hubble Telescope to peer into the unknown of the brain.

Until recently, scientists thought the majority of our genes were made up of junk DNA, which essentially didnt do anything, says Timothy Bredy, associate professor at the University of Queenslands Brain Institute.

But when researchers began to explore these regions, they realized that most of the genome is active and transcribed.

Using a powerful new sequencing approach, Bredys team identified 433 long noncoding RNAs from relatively unknown regions of the human genome.

The technology is a really interesting way to zero in on sites within the genome that would otherwise be masked, Bredy says. Its like harnessing the power of the Hubble Telescope to peer into the unknown of the brain.

A new gene, which the researchers labeled ADRAM, was found to not only act as a scaffold for molecules inside the cell, but also helped coordinate the formation of fear-extinction memory.

Until now, there have been no studies devoted to understanding these genes, or how they might influence brain function in the context of learning and memory.

Our findings suggest that long noncoding RNAs provide a bridge, linking dynamic environmental signals with the mechanisms that control the way our brains respond to fear, Bredy says.

With this new understanding of gene activity, we can now work towards developing tools to selectively target long noncoding RNAs in the brain that directly modify memory, and hopefully, develop a new therapy for PTSD and phobia.

The study appears in Cell Reports.

The Brain & Behaviour Research Foundation (NARSAD), the National Institutes of Health, the Australian Research Council, and the Westpac Bicentennial Foundation funded the work.

Source: University of Queensland

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Bulgari Releases the Thinnest Mechanical Watch in the World – Gear Patrol

Posted: at 6:32 am

More accurate, more robust, smaller, thinner...these are goals that have motivated watchmakers for centuries. Now, however, the watch world has just seen a milestone in the latter: the newly announced Bulgari Octo Finissimo Ultra, which is barely thicker than a U.S. quarter and the thinnest mechanical watch in the world.

Sorry about your still highly impressive 2mm-thick Altiplano, Piaget, but Bulgari has snatched the mantle with a mechanical watch measuring a fraction of a millimeter thinner; the new one is just 1.8mm thick. A difference of 0.2mm might not sound significant, but cramming all 170 of the movement's intricate little parts into that space is no mean feat; in fact, it involves eight patented solutions.

Like the Piaget Altiplano, part of how Bulgari achieved this extreme svelteness was by combining elements of the case and dial into the movement itself. For example, the movement's mainplate (its foundational structure) doubles as the caseback. Materials like titanium for the 40mm-wide case and and tungsten carbide for the caseback/mainplate were used to maintain overall rigidity because at this level of thinness you have to worry about things like the watch itself bending or breaking. The crown has been replaced with two horizontal knobs (one for winding and one for setting the time), and even the bracelet and its clasp required new engineering solutions to match the case.

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Bulgari's Octo collection turns 10 years old in 2022, and it's long been the brand's technical playground in its competition for thinness and world records. The Finissimo Ultra is its eighth record, following very specific achievements like the "thinnest automatic watch with monopusher chronograph and tourbillon." Of course, the "thinnest mechanical watch" overall (without all those qualifiers) is the grail of Bulgari and the other brands with a horse in this race.

The Finissimo Ultra is notable for its thinness, but also for highlighting ten years of the Octo collection which has become the brand's flagship. It derives from the pen of Gerald Genta, the designer of watches like the Audemars Piguet Royal Oak (which is turning 50 this year) and the Patek Philippe Nautilus, which are very much in the zeitgeist right now. Sharing some common design traits with those watches, Bulgari's announcement is timely in a few ways.

Aside from its nearly two-dimensional appearance, a striking visual element of the Octo Finissimo Ultra is the QR code laser-engraved on the movement's ratchet wheel. Each watch also comes with (sigh) an NFT that helps authenticate it, as well as offers "exclusive access to a dedicated digital universe."

It's hard to imagine watches getting any thinner than this, and if they do it'll be by minuscule increments. But technical challenges such as this are where innovation still feels most relevant in the watch industry. While it might be hard to get your hands on one of the only 10 examples of the Octo Finissimo Ultra being produced and costing ~$440,000 each, the solutions used here may ultimately trickle down to thin watches that might be more affordable.

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Former Amazon Studios Chief Roy Price on His Downfall: ‘That Was Not a Good Week to Have a Bad Article’ – Next TV

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More than four years after his abrupt resignation amid a sexual harassment scandal, former Amazon Studios chief Roy Price publicly remarked on the damning expose that forced his ouster.

As Price sees it, his exile has more to do with timing than anything else.

Speaking to Bloomberg for a podcast detailing the rise of Amazon Studios and the broader Amazon Prime Video empire, Price seemed to indicate that the gravity of his career crisis was influenced by its proximity to the zeitgeist-shifting Harvey Weinstein scandal.

Writer Kim Masters' expose on Price's ill-fated 2015 interaction with producer Isa Hackett was published on October 12, 2017, the same week that the New York Times and New Yorker published separate stories that not only destroyed the career of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein and led to his criminal prosecution and imprisonment, but also spawned the global #MeToo movement.

Amazon's investigation of the 2015 Price-Hackett event, which was reported immediately to Amazon higher-ups by Hackett and originally detailed in an August 2017 report in The Information, came to an indefinite conclusion. However, Price said the timing of Masters' THR report -- which came out two months later, right as the Weinstein reports hit -- was too much for the seminal Amazon video executive to overcome.

"That was not a good week to have a bad article," said Price, 55, who has not worked since leaving Amazon.

Certainly for Price, timing couldn't have been everything.

Hackett, the married executive producer of Amazon original series Man in a High Castle, claimed Price made unwanted and lewd overtures to her in an Uber ride to a 2015 pilot screening event at ComicCon in San Diego.

Commenting publicly for one of the few times since his departure, Price doesn't dispute the interaction occurred, but claims he wasn't coming onto the producer, merely engaging in a self-deprecating joke that was misunderstood.

"It was obviously unfortunate and unintended," Price told Bloomberg, conceding there was "banter in the Uber" amid the "very short" 1 a.m. ride that also included another Amazon employee.

"I deeply apologize if the banter was overboard," Price added. "Everyone has the right to define their own line of humor..."

The son of FrankPrice, who served as chairman of Columbia Pictures and Universal Pictures, the Hackett event wasn't the only socially awkward, sexually charged moment tied to Price during his 13-year tenure as Amazon's first video exec.

Price hasn't given many interviews since his departure. But in November 2020, he told the Los Angeles Times that he wasn't looking to "elicit sympathy," but he doesn't think his #MeToo transgressions rise to the level of Weinstein, comedian Louis C.K. and former Fox News anchor Bill O'Reilly.

I just didnt believe that, like, a false, vicious, totally contrary-to-fact narrative like that could be articulated, that it could actually be accepted and impact your reputation and all of your friends and family, Price told the L.A. Times. It just seemed like such a bizarre set of circumstances out of some Russian novel.

The L.A. Times also spoke to unnamed Amazon co-workers who said the "punishment didn't fit the crime," and who also implied that Price's firing was influenced by "internal and external pressures" occurring at Amazon in 2017.

Masters' report detailed broader cultural issues under Price. And there was plenty fo circumstantial smoke tied to his Amazon exit. Not only did Amazon Studios under the former top executive's watch sign a multiyear deal with another noted #MeToo transgressor, Woody Allen, two of the biggest stars for two of Amazon Studios' seminal hits, Casey Affleck (Oscar contender Manchester By the Sea) and Jeffrey Tambor (original series Transparent), ended up under on-set sexual harassment scrutiny, as well.

However, as Bloomberg noted, at the time of Price's ouster, Amazon Founder Jeff Bezos -- enthralled and absorbed by the Hollywood industry he'd originally sought to disrupt and unseat -- was putting Price under pressure, seeking to broaden the reach of Amazon Studios beyond niche, artist-driven shows like Transparent into globally impactful hits.

"Over time, your audience gets bigger as your service grows around the world. And you really need some tentpole shows," Price told Bloomberg. "So you've got to have, whatever it is, your Game of Thrones."

Bezos even told Price at a meeting, "Bring me my Game of Thrones."

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Former Amazon Studios Chief Roy Price on His Downfall: 'That Was Not a Good Week to Have a Bad Article' - Next TV

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