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  • ‘No spacecraft would survive’: Europe simulates catastrophic solar storm to warn of real risks

    ‘No spacecraft would survive’: Europe simulates catastrophic solar storm to warn of real risks

    Europe has just run its most extreme space weather simulation yet — a scenario so severe that no spacecraft was left unscathed in the exercise.

    The European Space Agency (ESA) staged the exercise at its mission control center in Darmstadt,…

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  • Ancient legends of the undead reveal how societies tried to explain disease outbreaks before science

    Ancient legends of the undead reveal how societies tried to explain disease outbreaks before science

    Imagine a city street at dusk, silent save for the rising sound of a collective guttural moan. Suddenly, a horde of ragged, bloodied creatures appear, their feet shuffling along the pavement, their hollow eyes locked on fleeing figures…

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  • Football Falls To No. 16 Virginia In Overtime, 17-16

    Football Falls To No. 16 Virginia In Overtime, 17-16

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  • Elon Musk Says China’s Falcon 9 Rival Might Outperform In 5 Years ‘If They Are Lucky,’ Notes SpaceX Will Be Launching Starship By Then

    Elon Musk Says China’s Falcon 9 Rival Might Outperform In 5 Years ‘If They Are Lucky,’ Notes SpaceX Will Be Launching Starship By Then

    Elon Musk on Saturday stated that SpaceX’s Chinese rival, LandSpace Technology’s Zhuque-3 launch vehicle, might outperform the Falcon 9 “if they are lucky,” but it could still take a few years.

    Rising Competition

    Musk noted that LandSpace has…

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  • Can intermittent fasting help in cancer treatment? Cancer surgeon warns ‘you cannot selectively kill cancer cells…’

    Can intermittent fasting help in cancer treatment? Cancer surgeon warns ‘you cannot selectively kill cancer cells…’

    In recent years, intermittent fasting has surged in popularity, often hailed as a solution for various health concerns, including its potential role in cancer prevention and even treatment. However, this mainstream attention has inevitably led…

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  • Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni’s 3 Big Lessons From Phia

    Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni’s 3 Big Lessons From Phia

    Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni, both 23, are turning heads with Phia, their AI fashion app that’s drawing interest from investors and trendsetters.

    Phia, an AI-powered shopping assistant, went live in April and said…

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  • Two men arrested after Louvre jewel heist | France

    Two men arrested after Louvre jewel heist | France

    Two suspects have been arrested in relation to last Sunday’s heist at the Louvre museum in Paris, in which a gang of four men made off with crown jewels worth an estimated €88m (£76m), according to the Paris prosecutor.

    Citing police sources,…

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  • Intel’s Advanced Packaging Could Be America’s Answer to Silicon Dominance

    Intel’s Advanced Packaging Could Be America’s Answer to Silicon Dominance

    Intel might be the key to re-realizing the American dream of advanced chip production and packaging on U.S. soil. Under the Trump administration, the United States has been making significant efforts to establish leading-edge chip manufacturing…

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  • EXCLUSIVE: Alexandra Eala looks forward to 2026 ‘but maybe 2027 will be even better’

    EXCLUSIVE: Alexandra Eala looks forward to 2026 ‘but maybe 2027 will be even better’

    Alexandra Eala: ‘I take so much pride in this’

    There is a maturity and groundedness detectable with Eala beyond her years, one that emanates from a tight-knit family background.

    Her mother Rizza was a backstroke swimmer who medalled at the…

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  • Stellerus uses satellites to visualise 3D wind data for weather forecasts, insurance risks

    Stellerus uses satellites to visualise 3D wind data for weather forecasts, insurance risks

    Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) start-up Stellerus Technology aims to be the world’s first provider of satellite-enabled three-dimensional wind data to help wind power, transport and insurance firms boost revenues, cut costs and manage risks, according to its founders.

    Stellerus, founded in 2023 by the university’s academics, would leverage China’s cost competitiveness in satellite manufacturing to make global 3D wind data collection economically viable, said Su Hui, the chairwoman and co-founder.

    3D wind data – wind direction and speed and their changes with altitude – is crucial for improving weather forecasting, especially severe climate events.

    Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

    “After I came to Hong Kong, I realised the technology for implementing such a project in mainland China was quite developed and the cost would be much lower than overseas,” Su said. “In the US, such a satellite could cost US$100 million to build, compared with 20 million yuan [US$2.8 million] in China.”

    Su Hui, the chairwoman and co-founder of Stellerus Technology. Photo: Edmond So alt=Su Hui, the chairwoman and co-founder of Stellerus Technology. Photo: Edmond So>

    Su, a hydraulic expert, joined the HKUST’s department of civil and environmental engineering in 2022 as chair professor. She was formerly a principal scientist and weather programme manager at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Nasa.

    By deploying advanced optical sensors, Stellerus could collect data and use artificial intelligence to analyse carbon dioxide, methane and water vapour in the atmosphere to calculate changes in wind direction and speed, she said.

    “Such detailed data is lacking for meteorological observation and analysis globally,” she said. “Various organisations, including Nasa, plan to embark on such a project, but none has been implemented so far due to the high cost of launching a satellite constellation.”

    Nasa was testing laser technology for developing space-based 3D wind measurements, according to its website. It was also collaborating with the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to develop advanced remote weather sensing instruments that can be flown aboard satellites to collect highly precise data to improve weather forecasting globally.

    In August 2023, HKUST partnered with Chang Guang Satellite Technology – a Jilin government-backed firm and China’s first commercial remote sensing satellite company – to become Hong Kong’s first higher education institution to launch an Earth environmental satellite.

    Stellerus paid the university a licensing fee to obtain wind prediction data, which was derived from high-resolution digital images, with each pixel depicting half a square metre of area on the ground.

    Stellerus, the winner of the HKUST-Sino Group entrepreneurship competition last month, had been designing new satellites for climate observation, said CEO David Liu.

    The Hong Kong Science and Technology Park-based company, which has raised “tens of millions” of dollars from investors since inception, aimed to launch a pair of satellites via the Tianzhou-10 spacecraft within the next 18 months, followed by another five, Liu added.

    The six satellites would form a constellation, which should be sufficient for global coverage of wind data, Liu said, adding Stellerus aimed to supply the data to developers of applications for the aviation, shipping and insurance industries.

    “The applications include aircraft route optimisation for fuel saving and air turbulence avoidance, shipping route planning for fuel efficiency, as well as climate risk management and product pricing by property and casualty insurers,” he said.

    Stellerus was in advanced talks with wind-farm developers and state-owned power grid operators, which were interested in using its 3D wind data for a fee, Liu added.

    China has the world’s largest fleet of wind farms.

    The data would help wind farm operators enhance power sales and save tens of millions of yuan spent on building wind monitoring towers, said Jeffrey Xu Mingyuan, the chief technology officer at Stellerus.

    “Currently, it is very costly to obtain accurate wind data, especially for offshore operators,” he said. “We aim to tackle the technology bottleneck by providing more affordable and better quality data useful for siting wind farms, energy storage, trading and grid access planning.”

    This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

    Copyright (c) 2025. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.


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