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SpaceX unveils Mars rocket prototype
SpaceX’s ‘Starship’ rocket will be ready for test flights in just a couple of months, says the company’s chief executive, Elon Musk. The 50-metre-tall rocket, which sports three reusable engines, will be the largest and most powerful rocket ever made when combined as planned with the company’s Super Heavy booster.
NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine responded to the news by pointing out that the project SpaceX is working on for NASA is “years behind schedule”. “NASA expects to see the same level of enthusiasm focused on the investments of the American taxpayer,” wrote Bridenstine on Twitter.
MIT Technology Review | 6 min read
“Disappointingly low” French budget
Spending on research in France will remain flat at around €7 billion (US$7.6 billion) in 2020 — a figure scientists are calling “disappointingly low”. But many researchers are already looking forward to 2021, when the government is expected to create its first national strategy for research — a plan that is designed to energize French science and which might come with a meatier funding boost.
Environmental researcher jailed in Turkey
A food engineer in Turkey has been jailed for 15 months for publicizing a Ministry of Health study that the government wanted to keep secret. Bülent Şık was convicted of disclosing classified information for publishing information about his research in an Istanbul newspaper. Şık revealed that he and his colleagues found dangerous levels of toxic chemicals in food and water samples.
18-year study validates habitat corridors
Corridors that connect fragmented habitats work. That’s the result of a large study that created patches of wilderness and watched them develop over almost two decades. Researchers restored huge squares of native savanna in South Carolina, isolated within an ecologically monotone timber plantation. Connected patches had 14% more species than did unconnected patches by the end of the 18-year study.
The Washington Post | 5 min read
FEATURES & OPINION
Feeling stuck? Write a poem
“If you find yourself stuck on a particular problem, leave your experiment, close your laptop, stop taking your field measurements — and try writing a poem about it instead,” urges science communicator Sam Illingworth. He offers five tips for getting started with using poetry to communicate and celebrate your science.
A fairer way forward for AI in health care
Medical researchers are turning to artificial intelligence to improve health care — but are finding some cases where the solutions just make things worse. A selection of eye-opening examples illustrate how health-care inequalities that are recorded in big data can lead to systems that further widen the disparities.
This article is part of Nature Outlook: Digital Health, an editorially independent supplement produced with financial support from Bayer G4A.
Salmon scientist wades into Alaska’s mine war
“People have the general viewpoint that Alaska’s so big that there’s no way we could really screw it up,” says ecologist Daniel Schindler. But that’s far from the truth, says Schindler, who is embroiled in the battle over what could become the world’s biggest gold mine. Science explores the contrast between his painstaking research, analysing tiny structures called otoliths extracted from the inner ears of salmon, and his bold approach to scientific advocacy.