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  • Report: Apple M4, more comfortable strap will headline first major Vision Pro update

    Report: Apple M4, more comfortable strap will headline first major Vision Pro update

    Apple hasn’t iterated on its Vision Pro hardware since launching it in early 2024 for $3,499, opting instead to refine the headset with a steady stream of software updates. But Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports that a new version of the Vision Pro could arrive “as early as this year,” with a replacement for the 3-year-old Apple M2 chip and a more comfortable strap.

    Gurman says that the updated Vision Pro would ship with Apple’s M4 processor, which launched in the iPad Pro last year and has since found its way into new MacBook Pros, MacBook Airs, a new iMac, and a redesigned Mac mini.

    Our tests in Apple’s other devices (and publicly available benchmark databases like Geekbench’s) show the M4 offering roughly 50 percent better multicore CPU performance and 20 or 25 percent better graphics performance than the M2, respectable increases for a device like the Vision Pro that needs to draw high-resolution images with as little latency as possible. Improvements to the chip’s video encoding and decoding hardware and image signal processor should also provide small-but-noticeable improvements to the headset’s passthrough video feed.

    The report also claims that Apple is working on redesigned headbands for the new Vision Pro, to “reduce neck strain and head pain” and make the headset more comfortable to wear for longer periods of time. This update reportedly won’t be making major changes to the design of the device itself, so it would probably still come close to the 1.3–1.4-pound weight of the current M2-powered Vision Pro.

    The report doesn’t mention any pricing plans one way or the other. But it’s worth noting that Apple has functionally reduced prices on M4-equipped Macs over the last year and a half, most notably by bumping the minimum amount of RAM from 8GB to 16GB—a cut of a few hundred dollars wouldn’t suddenly change the Vision Pro into a mass-market product, but it would be a step in the right direction.

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  • Sarina Wiegman delivers as Lionesses revive Euro 2025 hopes

    Sarina Wiegman delivers as Lionesses revive Euro 2025 hopes

    Wiegman knows what it means to be under the spotlight, having led England to back-to-back major tournament finals.

    When you have set that standard, anything less is a disappointment.

    England’s level dropped dramatically against France which increased scrutiny on Wiegman, who suffered her first defeat at a Euros after winning 12 games in a row over the previous two tournaments.

    It was also the first time the reigning women’s European champions had lost the first match of their defence at the following finals.

    Wiegman admitted the scrutiny was “hard” but she focused on the task in hand.

    “I always knew ahead of this tournament that it was a very hard group. It can happen but then you need to win the other games,” she said.

    “So yes, I was excited, but at the same time I felt a little tense too. I think that’s completely normal as you really want to stay in the tournament and you want to win.

    “I just had to focus on my job, review well and think about how we could bring people together.”

    Wiegman has often delivered in the big moments and no manager has won more Euros matches than the Dutchwoman (13 – level with Germany’s former manager Tina Theune).

    She also boasts the best goals-per-game rate in the competition among managers to take charge of four or more matches, with her sides scoring 40 in 14 games.

    Having come under criticism for her decision to start Lauren James in the number 10 role against France – which left England vulnerable defensively – Wiegman made all the right choices against the Netherlands.

    James started on the right wing, with Manchester United’s Ella Toone starting in the number 10 role. They scored three of the four goals on the night.

    Jess Carter, who struggled against France at left-back, was moved into central defence, swapping with Alex Greenwood, and England kept a clean sheet.

    “The priority was that we wanted to skip and exploit space. The Netherlands pushed up so we wanted to go over them. That worked really well,” said Wiegman.

    “When you’re in their half of the pitch, you can start playing. We had some nice crosses and we spoke about that too.

    “[James] came in good positions but she can also do that in midfield. In midfield today we wanted Ella [Toone] because she can make good runs in behind.”

    The plan worked.

    Netherlands striker Vivianne Miedema had just eight touches in the first half and the Dutch conceded more than two goals in a single match at a major women’s tournament for the first time.

    They also managed just four shots against England – their fewest on record (since 2011) at a major tournament.

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  • New myosin inhibitors can drug the brain without stopping the heart

    New myosin inhibitors can drug the brain without stopping the heart

    Credit: Science Source

    Cancer cells, like this one, use motor proteins in the myosin family to move, replicate their energy-generating mitochondria, and complete cell division.

    A decade ago, when Courtney Miller of Scripps Research in Florida found that blocking a specific protein can interrupt methamphetamine addiction in mice, it was difficult to imagine drugs targeting that protein ever coming to the clinic. But two papers published last week describe her work developing a lead candidate for treating methamphetamine use disorder and provide data to show that a related compound for treating glioblastoma is ready for clinical trials.

    The target Miller homed in on is a myosin protein. Myosins are tiny motors; they clamp onto the cell’s actin skeleton and pull, generating force that cells use to move cargo, power muscle contractions, and pinch off the divisions between cells during replication. In the brain, nonmuscle myosin II (NMII) is important for forming new synapses.

    Illustration shows actin cytoskeleton interacting with myosin filament, below which there’s a close-up of a myosin dimer.

    Credit: C&EN/Shutterstock

    Myosin motors work by binding to actin and then bending, which generates force that cells use for various purposes. Myosin filaments in heart, skeletal, and smooth muscle cells are essential for muscle contraction.

    While their functions are diverse, myosins are similar in structure. NMII is so much like cardiac myosin, which keeps the heart beating, that researchers believed it to be impossible to target safely. A molecule that can inhibit all myosins, blebbistatin, has a tendency to stop the hearts of mice.

    Miller landed a grant in 2015 to develop new, more-selective inhibitors for NMII through a funding mechanism “specifically designed to help academic investigators bridge the gap of bringing new medications to the clinic,” she tells C&EN. She used that money to begin a medicinal chemistry campaign that found more-specific derivatives to replace an inhibitor that could never have been a safe drug (Cell 2025, DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.06.006).

    The team used what Miller calls a “brute force” medicinal chemistry approach that involved synthesizing about 500 blebbistatin derivatives. After putting these compounds through a battery of tests for solubility, photostability, ability to block various myosins in a test tube, and ability to interrupt cell division, the researchers found molecules that could block nonmuscle myosins without harming heart or skeletal muscles.

    Miller cofounded a company, Myosin Therapeutics, in 2020 to develop the results of that screen, including a tool compound for research use and an inhibitor that she hopes to develop to treat methamphetamine use disorder.

    Keunjung Heo, a postdoctoral researcher at Boston Children’s Hospital, has already used one of Myosin’s compounds to show that blocking NMII can promote healing following nerve injury in mice. She says it is encouraging that researchers can now target myosin using a compound with better solubility and specificity than blebbistatin. “However, the systemic effects of NMII inhibitors remain largely unknown,” she adds in an email. Learning more about the molecules’ effects on the rest of the body will be key for developing them in the clinic.

    Side-by-side chemical structures of the pan-myosin inhibitor blebbistatin and the Myosin Therapeutics compound MT-125. The most notable difference between the two is that where blebbistatin has a phenyl functional group, MT-125 has a quinoline.

    Alongside substance use disorder, Myosin’s pipeline also holds an NMII-targeting molecule that is being developed for glioblastoma.

    For years, Mayo Clinic physician-scientist Steven Rosenfeld has been trying to convince colleagues that nonmuscle myosins are critical in glioblastoma because tumor cells are more dependent on myosin than are healthy cells. But there’s a hitch: there are two subtypes of NMII, A and B, and removing just one subtype causes cells to upregulate the other so dramatically that the cells grow better than they would without treatment.

    Between that double bind and the risk of side effects from blocking heart or skeletal myosins, Rosenfeld has grown accustomed to hearing from other experts that myosin was impossible to block safely. But then a US National Institutes of Health program officer introduced him to Miller, and the two research groups teamed up to test one of the firm’s compounds, MT-125, against glioblastoma in mice (Cell 2025, DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.05.019).

    The researchers found that MT-125 strikes just the balance of specificity needed to treat glioblastoma and that it modestly increases the lifespan of mice with the cancer. When combined with other approved drugs, the molecule dramatically improved the animals’ survival. According to glioblastoma researcher Jerome Irianto of Florida State University, this second paper is “rich in both mechanistic insight and therapeutic promise.”

    The US Food & Drug Administration recently green-lighted the firm to start testing MT-125 in first-in-human trials. Earlier this year, Myosin Therapeutics raised an additional $3 million in seed funding to support this work.

    It’s gratifying to finally show some proof that myosin can be inhibited safely and confer some benefit in animal models, Rosenfeld says. “Courtney and I have been working in the wilderness for a long time.” Still, he cautions that any potential benefit to patients may be years away from being realized. “Patients who have this disease are understandably deeply concerned about finding a way to beat it, and I don’t want to raise hope unnecessarily.”

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  • Adam Levine shares fun fact about wife Behati Prinsloo, ‘All Night’ music video

    Adam Levine shares fun fact about wife Behati Prinsloo, ‘All Night’ music video



    Adam Levine on Behati Prinsloo in ‘All Night’ music video

    Adam Levine is sharing a sweet behind-the-scenes moment from Maroon 5’s latest music video, and it involves his wife, Behati Prinsloo, becoming a true fan in the process.

    During an appearance on TODAY on July 9, the Maroon 5 frontman opened up about working with Prinsloo on the music video for All Night, one of the songs from the band’s new album Love Is Like

    Levine, 46, revealed that the shoot was a unique experience for them as a couple — and especially amusing to see his wife so fully immersed in his world of music.

    “She’s a lot better looking than me,” Levine joked, adding, “I thought, ‘Why not you do this for once?’ And she was really into it. She was super excited.”

    The supermodel, 37, appears in the video wearing bold makeup, dancing and lip-syncing to the track, and according to Levine, she practiced quite a bit around the house. 

    “That’s the most she’s ever listened to my music before,” he said with a laugh, noting how cute it was to watch her get involved. 

    Their kids were especially thrilled to see their mom star in the video.

    Levine also spoke briefly about the process behind the band’s upcoming album. 

    “It was one of those things where I feel like we’ve written songs every which way and we wanted to get back to what started the band [and] made us successful in the first place,” he said.

    With Love Is Like, Maroon 5 is revisiting their roots, and with Prinsloo now joining in the fun, it’s a full-circle moment for the Levine household.

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  • HBO Max Orders ‘Big Bang Theory’ Spin-off ‘Stuart Fails To Save The Universe’

    HBO Max Orders ‘Big Bang Theory’ Spin-off ‘Stuart Fails To Save The Universe’

    Topline

    A new spin-off of “The Big Bang Theory” focused on one of the original series’ recurring characters has been ordered to series by HBO Max, the latest example of a continued push by studios to expand popular franchises and repackage familiar content in hopes of reaching streaming success.

    Key Facts

    The new show, called “Stuart Fails To Save The Universe,” will focus on the character of Stuart Bloom, the bumbling owner of the comic book store frequented by the main characters in the original series.

    “Stuart Fails To Save The Universe” will be the fourth show in the “Big Bang” universe after two other sitcoms were spawned from the original series to varying levels of success.

    “Young Sheldon,” set in the 1970s and following the childhood of the “Big Bang” main character, was immensely popular over its seven-season run and was regularly the most-watched show across streaming and television thanks, in part, to its wide availability—”Young Sheldon” aired on CBS and was also available to stream on Netflix, Max, Paramount+ and other services.

    The series stars Kevin Sussman as Bloom and actors Lauren Lapkus, Brian Posehn and John Ross Bowie, all of whom were recurring minor characters in “The Big Bang Theory,” and original series creator Chuck Lorre will executive produce alongside Zak Penn and Bill Prady.

    Get Forbes Breaking News Text Alerts: We’re launching text message alerts so you’ll always know the biggest stories shaping the day’s headlines. Text “Alerts” to (201) 335-0739 or sign up here: joinsubtext.com/forbes.

    The Expanded Tv Universes Of Star Wars, Star Trek, Full House And More

    “The Big Bang Theory” isn’t the only show whose characters have been rehashed to capture viewers familiar with their themes and characters as an extension of the ”comfort shows” that have proven to be viewership gold for streaming services. Perhaps the most pervasive examples are the seemingly endless reboots and spinoffs are the “Star Trek” and “Star Wars” franchises—Disney has created more than 15 shows in the “Star Wars” universe in the last 11 years and seven new “Star Trek” shows have aired or been announced since 2018. “Fuller House,” which brought back most characters from the 1990s sitcom “Full House,” ran for five seasons and drew strong viewership numbers to Netflix, and “Girl Meets World” from Disney ran for three seasons and starred many of the same actors from the original “Boy Meets World” show. Currently running are “Frasier” on Paramount+, a reboot of the show of the same name that ran from 1993 to 2004; a live-action reboot of “’Avatar: The Last Airbender;” “Queer Eye,” a re-do of an early 2000s reality show called “Queer Eye For The Straight Guy.”Critically acclaimed series “Cobra Kai,” a spin-off of “The Karate Kid” films, ended its six-season run earlier this year and “Roseanne” was brought back for a fan-favorite season in 2018 before racist tweets from its star cancelled its run.

    Surprising Fact

    Despite a slate of original series, comfort shows like “Gilmore Girls” and “Suits” claimed all 10 spots in Nielsen’s most-watched shows for 2023 and 2024. “The Big Bang Theory” was named 2024’s “most-binged title” in streaming, according to Nielsen.

    Key Background

    The plot of “Stuart Fails To Save The Universe” will focus on Bloom and his friends’ attempts to restore reality after bringing about a multiverse Armageddon by breaking a device built by original series main characters Sheldon and Leonard. While the original cast members aren’t signed on, the show’s log line promises appearances of “alternate-universe versions of characters we’ve come to know and love from ‘The Big Bang Theory.’”

    Crucial Quote

    “I wanted to do something radical that would take me out of my comfort zone,” Chuck Lorre said in a statement. “Something the characters on ‘The Big Bang Theory’ would have loved, hated, and argued about.”

    What We Don’t Know

    When the new show will air. HBO did not announce a premiere date.

    Tangent

    “The Big Bang Theory” ran for 12 seasons, starting in 2007, and holds a Guinness World Record as the longest-running multi-camera sitcom, surpassing “Cheers.” The show won 10 Emmy Awards, including four Outstanding Lead Actor prizes for Jim Parsons as Sheldon. In March, Max and Warner Bros. Unscripted Television launched “The Official Big Bang Theory Podcast” with author Jessica Radloff, who wrote a book about the series. “The Big Bang Theory” also spawned seven seasons of the massive hit “Young Sheldon” on CBS. Almost 12 million people tuned into the “Young Sheldon” finale live on CBS last June and 6 billion people watched the show across platforms that month, beating out new episodes of “Bridgerton” to become the most popular on television for the month. A spin-off of “Young Sheldon, “Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage,” aired its first season last year and a second is slated to premiere during the 2025-2026 TV season.

    Further Reading

    ‘The Official Big Bang Theory Podcast’ Launches On Max (Forbes)

    ‘Bridgerton’ Dominates Streaming Ratings In May—But ‘Young Sheldon’ Captures More Viewers Overall (Forbes)

    The World’s Highest-Paid TV Actors: Jim Parsons Leads With $27.5 Million (Forbes)

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  • Study: Fruits, vegetables protect against inflammatory bowel diseases

    Study: Fruits, vegetables protect against inflammatory bowel diseases

    People noshing healthy plant-based foods had a 14% lower risk of Crohn’s disease and an 8% lower risk of ulcerative colitis, researchers found. Adobe stock/HealthDay

    July 9 (UPI) — A healthy plant-based diet might protect people from inflammatory bowel diseases, a new study says.

    People noshing healthy plant-based foods had a 14% lower risk of Crohn’s disease and an 8% lower risk of ulcerative colitis, researchers found.

    On the other hand, an unhealthy diet containing more animal fats and vegetable oils was associated with a 15% increased risk of Crohn’s disease, results show.

    “Our research indicates that a healthy plant-based diet may protect against inflammatory bowel disease, with its anti-inflammatory properties playing a key role,” senior researcher Dr. Zhe Shen of the Zhejiang University School of Medicine in China said in a news release.

    For the study, researchers tracked more than 143,000 people participating in the UK Biobank, a large-scale health research project among residents of the United Kingdom. As part of the project, patients filled out diet questionnaires.

    During an average 14.5 years of follow-up, more than 1,000 people developed inflammatory bowel disease, researchers found.

    Researchers graded participants’ diet based on their intake of healthy plant foods, unhealthy plant foods, and animal products.

    Analysis showed that higher intake of fruits and vegetables accounted for part of the lower risk for Crohn’s disease, researchers said.

    Blood tests from participants indicate that the anti-inflammatory properties of plant-based foods might explain this protection, researchers said.

    “These findings underscore the beneficial association between healthy plant-based diets and reduced risk of ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease,” researchers concluded. “They provide important insights for the development of dietary guidelines aimed at preventing IBD.”

    The new study appears in the journal Molecular Nutrition & Food Research.

    More information

    The Mayo Clinic has more on inflammatory bowel disease.

    Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

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  • Measles cases in U.S. hit highest level in over 30 years

    LOS ANGELES, July 9 (Xinhua) — The number of measles cases in the United States has hit the highest level in more than 30 years, according to the data released Wednesday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    A total of 1,288 measles cases have been confirmed in the country, with 13 percent of cases hospitalized, so far in 2025, making it the worst year since 1992, when 2,126 cases were confirmed.

    The cases were reported across 38 states nationwide, with 753 in Texas alone, according to the CDC.

    There have been 27 outbreaks reported in 2025, and 88 percent of confirmed cases are outbreak-associated, said the CDC, adding that 92 percent of these cases are either unvaccinated or have an unknown vaccination status.

    The airborne, extremely infectious and potentially severe rash illness was officially eliminated from the United States in 2000, meaning there are no measles spreading within the country and new cases are only found when someone contracts measles abroad and returns to the country, the CDC explains on its website.

    Before the measles vaccine was introduced, an estimated 48,000 people were hospitalized and 400 to 500 people died in the United States each year. Enditem

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  • How to Marvel at the Spectacular Buck Moon This Week, Along With Mars and Venus

    How to Marvel at the Spectacular Buck Moon This Week, Along With Mars and Venus

    It’s officially summer, and with that comes the first full moon of the season. July’s full moon — known as the Buck Moon or the Thunder Moon — will light up the night sky on July 10 and be at its fullest going into July 11. It’ll be bright for the whole night but will reach peak luminosity at around 4:37 a.m. local time, which is a bit late (or early) for most skygazers. 

    According to Stellarium’s sky map, the moon will rise from the southeastern horizon just after sunset on Thursday and streak across the sky before setting on the southwestern horizon just before dawn. No matter where you are in the US, you’ll be able to see it virtually all night. 

    Should you not be able to see the moon due to weather or some other reason, you can also soak up a great view anytime between July 9 and July 12, as the moon will be more than 95% full during those days. 

    Why is it called the Buck Moon and Thunder Moon?

    According to The Farmer’s Almanac, July’s full moon actually has several names, including Buck Moon, Thunder Moon, Feather Moulting Moon and Salmon Moon. These names typically come from Native American and colonial times, and were used to describe the moon for the entire month, not just when it’s full. 

    White-tailed deer start growing antlers in March or April as the days start to lengthen. July marks the peak of their antler growth season, hence the name Buck Moon. Thunderstorms are also common in July, which is why it’s called the Thunder Moon. 

    The other two names are less common, but July marks the time when some species of salmon begin migrating for the mating season, while ducks engage in their annual moulting around this time of year as well. 

    Catch a glimpse of Mars and Venus

    The moon will be joined in the sky by Mars and Venus during its trip across the sky on July 10. Mars will be visible just after sunset in the western sky before setting. You won’t have long, since it’s scheduled to dip below the horizon before midnight. If you choose to stay up late, Venus will crest the eastern horizon shortly after 2 a.m. local time and be visible until sunrise. 

    Saturn will also be visible in the eastern sky, not far from the moon, but you’ll likely need binoculars or a telescope to see it beyond the moon’s glow.

    Once the moon finishes its monthly cycle, skygazers can check out the Alpha Capricornids and Southern Delta Aquariids meteor showers, both of which are scheduled to peak during the last few days of July.


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  • Nvidia's stock market value hits $4 trillion on AI dominance – Reuters

    1. Nvidia’s stock market value hits $4 trillion on AI dominance  Reuters
    2. Nvidia becomes world’s first $4tn company  BBC
    3. Nvidia beats Apple and Microsoft to become the world’s first $4 trillion public company  CNN
    4. Dow Jones Today: Stocks Rise as Nvidia Becomes First Company to Hit $4 Trillion Market Cap; Bitcoin Surges Above $111,000 Near Record  Investopedia
    5. Nvidia becomes first company to reach $4tn in market value  The Guardian

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  • AI shapes autonomous underwater “gliders” | MIT News

    AI shapes autonomous underwater “gliders” | MIT News

    Marine scientists have long marveled at how animals like fish and seals swim so efficiently despite having different shapes. Their bodies are optimized for efficient, hydrodynamic aquatic navigation so they can exert minimal energy when traveling long distances.

    Autonomous vehicles can drift through the ocean in a similar way, collecting data about vast underwater environments. However, the shapes of these gliding machines are less diverse than what we find in marine life — go-to designs often resemble tubes or torpedoes, since they’re fairly hydrodynamic as well. Plus, testing new builds requires lots of real-world trial-and-error.

    Researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and the University of Wisconsin at Madison propose that AI could help us explore uncharted glider designs more conveniently. Their method uses machine learning to test different 3D designs in a physics simulator, then molds them into more hydrodynamic shapes. The resulting model can be fabricated via a 3D printer using significantly less energy than hand-made ones.

    The MIT scientists say that this design pipeline could create new, more efficient machines that help oceanographers measure water temperature and salt levels, gather more detailed insights about currents, and monitor the impacts of climate change. The team demonstrated this potential by producing two gliders roughly the size of a boogie board: a two-winged machine resembling an airplane, and a unique, four-winged object resembling a flat fish with four fins.

    Peter Yichen Chen, MIT CSAIL postdoc and co-lead researcher on the project, notes that these designs are just a few of the novel shapes his team’s approach can generate. “We’ve developed a semi-automated process that can help us test unconventional designs that would be very taxing for humans to design,” he says. “This level of shape diversity hasn’t been explored previously, so most of these designs haven’t been tested in the real world.”

    But how did AI come up with these ideas in the first place? First, the researchers found 3D models of over 20 conventional sea exploration shapes, such as submarines, whales, manta rays, and sharks. Then, they enclosed these models in “deformation cages” that map out different articulation points that the researchers pulled around to create new shapes.

    The CSAIL-led team built a dataset of conventional and deformed shapes before simulating how they would perform at different “angles-of-attack” — the direction a vessel will tilt as it glides through the water. For example, a swimmer may want to dive at a -30 degree angle to retrieve an item from a pool.

    These diverse shapes and angles of attack were then used as inputs for a neural network that essentially anticipates how efficiently a glider shape will perform at particular angles and optimizes it as needed.

    Giving gliding robots a lift

    The team’s neural network simulates how a particular glider would react to underwater physics, aiming to capture how it moves forward and the force that drags against it. The goal: find the best lift-to-drag ratio, representing how much the glider is being held up compared to how much it’s being held back. The higher the ratio, the more efficiently the vehicle travels; the lower it is, the more the glider will slow down during its voyage.

    Lift-to-drag ratios are key for flying planes: At takeoff, you want to maximize lift to ensure it can glide well against wind currents, and when landing, you need sufficient force to drag it to a full stop.

    Niklas Hagemann, an MIT graduate student in architecture and CSAIL affiliate, notes that this ratio is just as useful if you want a similar gliding motion in the ocean.

    “Our pipeline modifies glider shapes to find the best lift-to-drag ratio, optimizing its performance underwater,” says Hagemann, who is also a co-lead author on a paper that was presented at the International Conference on Robotics and Automation in June. “You can then export the top-performing designs so they can be 3D-printed.”

    Going for a quick glide

    While their AI pipeline seemed realistic, the researchers needed to ensure its predictions about glider performance were accurate by experimenting in more lifelike environments.

    They first fabricated their two-wing design as a scaled-down vehicle resembling a paper airplane. This glider was taken to MIT’s Wright Brothers Wind Tunnel, an indoor space with fans that simulate wind flow. Placed at different angles, the glider’s predicted lift-to-drag ratio was only about 5 percent higher on average than the ones recorded in the wind experiments — a small difference between simulation and reality.

    A digital evaluation involving a visual, more complex physics simulator also supported the notion that the AI pipeline made fairly accurate predictions about how the gliders would move. It visualized how these machines would descend in 3D.

    To truly evaluate these gliders in the real world, though, the team needed to see how their devices would fare underwater. They printed two designs that performed the best at specific points-of-attack for this test: a jet-like device at 9 degrees and the four-wing vehicle at 30 degrees.

    Both shapes were fabricated in a 3D printer as hollow shells with small holes that flood when fully submerged. This lightweight design makes the vehicle easier to handle outside of the water and requires less material to be fabricated. The researchers placed a tube-like device inside these shell coverings, which housed a range of hardware, including a pump to change the glider’s buoyancy, a mass shifter (a device that controls the machine’s angle-of-attack), and electronic components.

    Each design outperformed a handmade torpedo-shaped glider by moving more efficiently across a pool. With higher lift-to-drag ratios than their counterpart, both AI-driven machines exerted less energy, similar to the effortless ways marine animals navigate the oceans.

    As much as the project is an encouraging step forward for glider design, the researchers are looking to narrow the gap between simulation and real-world performance. They are also hoping to develop machines that can react to sudden changes in currents, making the gliders more adaptable to seas and oceans.

    Chen adds that the team is looking to explore new types of shapes, particularly thinner glider designs. They intend to make their framework faster, perhaps bolstering it with new features that enable more customization, maneuverability, or even the creation of miniature vehicles.

    Chen and Hagemann co-led research on this project with OpenAI researcher Pingchuan Ma SM ’23, PhD ’25. They authored the paper with Wei Wang, a University of Wisconsin at Madison assistant professor and recent CSAIL postdoc; John Romanishin ’12, SM ’18, PhD ’23; and two MIT professors and CSAIL members: lab director Daniela Rus and senior author Wojciech Matusik. Their work was supported, in part, by a Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) grant and the MIT-GIST Program.

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