How Engineers Will Make The Costa Concordia Float Once Again

Next week, Italians will finally say goodbye to the wrecked Costa Concordia cruise ship that has been sitting off the coast of Giglio Island for two and a half years.

Ladderlimb

One for the DIY fan, the award winning LadderLimb is a helpful ladder accessory that allows you to securely hang in place buckets...

Make Hand Music With Your Own Pair Of Imogen Heap's Gloves

Imogen Heap is one of those musicians who has long embraced tech, and now she's giving you a chance to get your hands on her musical gloves.

13 Of The Weirdest Computer Mice We've Ever Seen

Not too long ago, we dived into the world of unconventional, strange and often horrible computer pointing devices...

G-BOOM Wireless Bluetooth Boombox Speaker

Winner of “Speaker of the Year” from iLounge, ultimate Bluetooth Boombox pumps out powerful sound and full bass...

Redirecting city-killer asteroids with kamikaze spacecraft



Nowadays, it seems like meteors are finding their way into the news more and more. Two days ago, the skies over Alabama played host to one, and we probably don't have to remind you about the explosive visitor that violated Russian airspace back in February. But both of these recent events pale in comparison with the monster space rocks that European scientists are trying to prepare for for.
The NEOShield Consortium is focused on developing defenses against city-killer asteroids. Every few hundred years, their estimates say, Earth is at risk from one of these lurking menaces. What's more, we can't think of any cities that have been wiped off the face of the planet in recent years, so arguably, we're past due for something catastrophic.


To keep Earth safe, Project NEOShield is designing a series of massive spacecraft known as kinetic impactors. These will be launched from Earth at a high rate of speed and suicide themselves against any dangerous incoming asteroids. Hopefully, this will either speed up or slow down the asteroids enough to allow for a near-miss instead of a direct hit.


In testing what effect their doomed spacecraft will have on giant asteroids, NEOShield scientists have accelerated millimeter-sized objects to over 22,000 miles per hour before slamming them into blocks of stone.