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‘We helped usher in the modern era of AI in NGA.’

Mark Munsell

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

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‘Serving the country and pushing the boundaries of human existence is very purposeful.’

MIT AeroAstro Department members Evana Gizzi (left) and Olivier de Weck (right) chat in front of the department’s exhibit on a game called GEOPatrol that simulates non-cooperative interactions in space between two space actors. Credit: Nicole Fandel/MIT Lincoln Laboratory

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

The post ‘Serving the country and pushing the boundaries of human existence is very purposeful.’ appeared first on SpaceNews.

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‘I loved thinking about how to make science possible for America and for the world’

Kartik Sheth photographed in January 2026 in Washington, D.C. Credit: Jason Dixson Photography

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

The post ‘I loved thinking about how to make science possible for America and for the world’ appeared first on SpaceNews.

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‘You need competent people in the government to direct and make decisions.’

Claire Leon

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

The post ‘You need competent people in the government to direct and make decisions.’ appeared first on SpaceNews.

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‘Now it’s time to turn the baton over to others. I hope there’s somebody else to grab that baton.’

Phil McAlister speaks at the 2025 SpaceNews Icon Awards in December 2025 in Washington, D.C. Credit: Jason Dixson Photography

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

The post ‘Now it’s time to turn the baton over to others. I hope there’s somebody else to grab that baton.’ appeared first on SpaceNews.

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‘People knew that they could come to us to figure out how to get things done.’

Credit: Courtesy Shawn Phillips

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

The post ‘People knew that they could come to us to figure out how to get things done.’ appeared first on SpaceNews.

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‘As far as I know, I’m still the assistant administrator of NESDIS.’

Stephen Volz photographed in January 2026 in Washington, D.C. Credit: Jason Dixson Photography

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

The post ‘As far as I know, I’m still the assistant administrator of NESDIS.’ appeared first on SpaceNews.

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‘Leaders can be replaced, institutional knowledge cannot’

Charity Weeden photographed in January 2026 in Washington, D.C. Credit: Jason Dixson Photography

In 2025, more than 322,000 civil servants left jobs voluntarily or were dismissed out of a workforce of roughly 2.4 million. The 13% drop in staffing is the largest single-year decline since the end of World War II. In total, more than 5,000 people who were part of the federal space workforce left their positions. […]

The post ‘Leaders can be replaced, institutional knowledge cannot’ appeared first on SpaceNews.

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An illuminating, if imperfect, celebration of friction

People who teach physics often remove friction from calculations to make life easier for students. While that might speed up someone’s homework, it does mean that this all-important force tends to fade into the background, despite it being crucial for our daily lives. Here to bring friction centre stage is Jennifer Vail, a “tribologist” – or studier of friction – at US firm TA Instruments.

Friction: a Biography is an engaging and wide-ranging book illustrating its many manifestations in the natural world, showing how this force can be harnessed to solve practical engineering problems. Vail, who wrote the book after giving a hugely popular TED talk on friction, does a great job of connecting abstract physical ideas with familiar human experience.

I like, for example, her description of what happens when two surfaces slide over each other but the friction between them isn’t constant. As she explains, this “stick-slip” motion isn’t great if you’re trying to inject a drug into someone with a syringe. But it can be exploited to beautiful effect by violinists, creating “downright lovely” sounds (though apparently not when she’s practising on her own viola).

One of the book’s strengths is its historical context. Famous figures like Leonardo da Vinci are introduced alongside the development of their ideas, lending a human dimension to the science. The author does a great job of explaining how tribology, which comes from the Greek for “to rub”, has been shaped by careful experimentation and the application of rigorous scientific thinking to industrial problems.

After a trip to Switzerland, the physicist Frank Bowden showed we can ski because frictional heating causes a thin layer of snow to melt beneath our skis, providing liquid lubrication.

After a trip to Switzerland, for example, the Australian-born physicist Frank Bowden showed we can ski because frictional heating causes a thin layer of snow to melt beneath our skis, providing liquid lubrication. This overturned an earlier explanation associated with Osborne Reynolds (best known for the eponymous number marking the transition from laminar to turbulent flow) who’d thought that snow melts due to pressure.

Then there is the 19th-century researcher Robert Thurston, whose pendulum experiments on friction in bearings, described here in detail, guided the design of more efficient lubricated systems. As Vail explains, understanding friction is vital in the design of engines, where even small modifications – such as texturing surfaces, adding coatings, or putting nanoparticles into lubricants – can make them much more efficient and extend their useful life.

Historical anecdotes are woven throughout the book. The story of why graphite in pencils came to be called “lead” is particularly memorable. It turns out that the Romans used lead to write, so the name stuck – even after graphite became more popular because it allowed darker writing. There are also lots of excursions into the natural world: did you know that beetles have a protein in their leg joints that acts as a solid lubricant?

Smooth operator

Vail’s discussion of lubrication is clear and well-integrated with practical examples. Particularly insightful is the explanation of how hydrodynamic lubrication occurs in biological systems, such as human cartilage, where a thin fluid layer separates cartilage surfaces in joints, reducing friction and wear. As Vail makes clear, tribology is vital in physiology, for example in how contact lenses work when we blink our eyes or how food feels in our mouth when we chew.

The book also examines fluid dynamics and drag, distinguishing between viscosity as a material property and drag as a force. Vail’s discussion of plaque on the walls of our arteries is particularly compelling. If there’s not enough drag to shear off the plaque it can cause blockages and, potentially, a heart attack – showing how friction plays a role in our health.

Environmental considerations are addressed too. The author discusses, for example, the impact of polytetrafluoroethalyene (PTFE), which she calls “the most controversial solid lubricant ever”. Also known as Teflon, it is widely used in frying pans, but is synthesized using some pretty nasty carcinogenic “forever” chemicals that don’t break down in the environment. PTFE also has a shady past, being first used in the Manhattan atomic-bomb project to coat valves when separating isotopes of uranium.

Friction can improve energy efficiency, reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, and mitigate global warming.

On a more positive note, Vail shows how an understanding of friction can improve energy efficiency, reduce greenhouse-gas emissions, and mitigate global warming. The book extends further still, encompassing atmospheric, oceanic and planetary processes, as well as astronomy and cosmology. Friction is a universal physical principle, extending well beyond conventional engineering applications and broadening the scope of the book.

However, Vail’s intended audience is not always clear. Some sections read like a primer for tribologists, while others are highly speculative, such as the idea that life originated on Earth because oxidized molybdenum was delivered from Mars aboard Martian meteorites. There are also occasional errors and ambiguities, such as her discussion of the subtleties of the Earth’s tides.

Statements such as electric vehicles “consuming 106% energy” could have been more clearly explained, while her market estimate for anti-friction coatings of just over $1.5m by 2028 is almost certainly too low by three orders of magnitude. While these issues do not undermine the book’s scientific substance, they may distract careful readers, and the rapid movement between topics occasionally disrupts the narrative flow.

Overall, though, Vail does a good job of balancing technical exposition with anecdote and gentle humour. Friction might seem an unpromising subject for a book, but non-expert readers will find much to surprise and engage them. Despite its flaws, I would recommend it as an illuminating, if imperfect, celebration of friction and its central role in science and engineering.

  • 2026 Harvard University Press 248pp £23.95hb

The post An illuminating, if imperfect, celebration of friction appeared first on Physics World.

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Over the moon and under the radar

SLS/Orion 2026 Feb 2

Depending on when you read this, NASA will be weeks — perhaps days — from one of its biggest missions in years. On Jan. 17, NASA rolled out the Space Launch System rocket, with Orion spacecraft mounted on top, to the launch pad for the Artemis 2 mission. The launch will be the first time […]

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Pockets and pillars capture ricocheting molecules in vacuum pump

A passive vacuum pump that uses 3D-printed surfaces to better absorb gas molecules has been unveiled by researchers in the UK. It removes gas nearly four-times faster than a similar system with a flat surface. The pump could make it easier to design quantum sensors that require high-vacuum conditions.

Cold atoms are at the heart of many quantum-sensing technologies. For example, atom interferometry is used to measure tiny deviations in local gravity – which can be used to map underground infrastructure.

Cold-atom systems must operate at high vacuum and most vacuum pumps are mechanical or electrical in nature. The size of these active pumps and the energy that they consume makes it difficult to operate sensors in remote or mobile scenarios – particularly on satellites. As a result, researchers who are designing quantum sensors are keen on reducing or even eliminating their reliance on active pumps.

One solution is the use of passive pumps, which have surfaces made from materials that absorb large numbers of gas molecules. Now, Lucia Hackermueller and colleagues at the University of Nottingham, Torr Scientific and Metamorphic Additive Manufacturing have created two new textured surfaces that accelerate passive pumping.

Bounce optimization

One of their surfaces is a hexagonal array of tapered pockets that resembles a honeycomb. The other surface is a hexagonal array of conical protrusions.  They chose their designs after doing Monte Carlo computer simulations of how gas molecules behave near textured surfaces. When a molecule collides with a flat surface it will either be absorbed or bounce off the surface and escape. However, if the surface has 3D structures on it, a molecule may ricochet back and forth several times between structures before it escapes. Each collision increases the chance that the molecule will be absorbed by the surface. So, the researchers sought to optimize the number of bounces in their simulations.

They then used the 3D printing of a titanium alloy to create the two promising designs on hockey-puck sized flanges that could be installed in a conventional high-vacuum system (see figure). The final step in the fabrication process was to coat the surfaces with a nonevaporable getter, which is a material designed specifically to absorb gas molecules in a vacuum system.

The team found that their hexagonal-pocket design pumped gas 3.8 times faster than a flat surface – and the hexagonal-protrusion design achieved a performance that is nearly as good.

Team member Ben Hopton at the University of Nottingham says, “What’s exciting about this work is that relatively simple surface engineering can have a surprisingly large effect. By shifting some of the burden from active pumping to passive surface-based pumping, this approach has the potential to significantly reduce, or even remove, the need for bulky pumps in some vacuum systems, allowing quantum technologies to be far more portable.”

The research is described in Physical Review Applied.

The post Pockets and pillars capture ricocheting molecules in vacuum pump appeared first on Physics World.

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Metasurfaces create super-sized neutral atom arrays for quantum computing

A new way of creating arrays of ultracold neutral atoms could make it possible to build quantum computers with more than 100 000 quantum bits (qubits) – two orders of magnitude higher than today’s best machines. The approach, which was demonstrated by physicists at Columbia University in the US, uses optical metasurfaces to generate the forces required to trap and manipulate the atoms. According to its developers, this method is much more scalable than traditional techniques for generating arrays of atomic qubits.

“Neutral atom arrays have become a leading quantum technology, notably for quantum computing, where single atoms serve as qubits,” explains atomic physicist Sebastian Will, who co-led the study with his Columbia colleague Nanfang Yu. “However, the technology available so far to make these arrays limits array sizes to about 10 000 traps, which corresponds to a maximum of 10 000 atomic qubits.”

Building on a well-established technique

In common with standard ways of constructing atomic qubit arrays, the new method relies on a well-established technique known as optical tweezing. The principle of optical tweezing is that highly focused laser beams generate forces at their focal points that are strong enough to trap individual objects – in this case, atoms.

To create many such trapping sites while maintaining tight control of the laser’s light field, scientists typically use devices called spatial light modulators (SLMs) and acousto-optic deflectors (AODs) to split a single moderately intense laser beam into many lower-intensity ones. Such arrays have previously been used to trap thousands of atoms at once. In 2025, for example, researchers at the California Institute of Technology in the US created arrays containing up to 6100 trapped atoms – a feat that Will describes as “an amazing achievement”.

A superposition of tens of thousands of flat lenses

In the new work, which is detailed in Nature, Will, Yu and colleagues replaced these SLMs and AODs with flat optical surfaces made up of two-dimensional arrays of nanometre-sized “pixels”. These so-called metasurfaces can be thought of as a superposition of tens of thousands of flat lenses. When a laser beam hits them, it produces tens of thousands of focal points in a unique pattern. And because the pixels in the Columbia team’s metasurfaces are smaller than the wavelength of light they are manipulating (300 nm compared to 520 nm), Yu explains that they can use these metasurfaces to generate tweezer arrays directly, without the need for additional bulky and expensive equipment.

The Columbia researchers demonstrated this by trapping atoms in several highly uniform two-dimensional (2D) patterns, including a square lattice with 1024 trapping sites; patterns shaped like quasicrystals and the Statue of Liberty with hundreds of sites; and a circle made up of atoms spaced less than 1.5 microns apart. They also created a 3.5 mm diameter metasurface that contains more than 100 million pixels and used it to generate a 600 x 600 array of trapping sites. “This is two orders of magnitude beyond the capabilities of current technologies,” Yu says.

Another advantage of using metasurfaces, Will adds, is that they are “extremely resilient” to high laser intensities. “This is what is needed to trap hundreds of thousands of neutral atom qubits,” he explains. “Metasurfaces’ laser power handling capabilities go several orders of magnitude beyond the state of the art with SLMs and AODs.”

Laying the groundwork

For arrays of up to 1000 focal points, the researchers showed that their metasurface-generated arrays can trap single atoms with a high level of control and precision and with high single-atom detection fidelity. This is essential, they say, because it demonstrates that the arrays’ quality is high enough to be useful for quantum computing.

While they are not there yet, Will says that the metasurface atomic tweezer arrays they developed “lay the critical groundwork for realizing neutral-atom quantum computers that operate with more than 100 000 qubits”. These high numbers, he adds, will be essential for realizing quantum computers that can achieve “quantum advantage” by outperforming classical computers. “The large number of qubits also allows for more ‘redundancy’ in the system to realize highly-efficient quantum error correction codes, which can make quantum computing – which is usually fragile – more resilient,” he says.

The Columbia team is now working on further improving the quality of their metasurfaces. “On the atomic arrays side, we will now try to actually fill such arrays with more than 100 000 atoms,” Will tells Physics World. “Doing this will require a much more powerful laser than we currently have, but it’s in a realistic range.”

The post Metasurfaces create super-sized neutral atom arrays for quantum computing appeared first on Physics World.

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Tomorrow.io banks $175 million for DeepSky weather constellation

SAN FRANCISCO – Tomorrow.io raised $175 million to fund DeepSky, a satellite constellation designed to gathering vast quantities of atmospheric data for artificial intelligence models. With the money provided by private equity investors Stonecourt Capital and HarbourVest Partners, Tomorrow.io plans to rapidly expand its “space infrastructure and intelligence platform, enabling unprecedented global atmospheric sensing and […]

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