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May 5, 2021 4:52 PM
A small plane crashed into a Mississippi home, killing one of the home’s four occupants and three Texas residents who were flying to a university graduation ceremony, authorities said Wednesday.
A National Transportation Safety Board investigator was en route to Hattiesburg, about 90 miles (145 kilometers) southeast of the Mississippi capital of Jackson, to investigate Tuesday’s crash and fire, the agency said.
Authorities weren’t aware of any distress calls from the Mitsubishi MU-2B-60 but have yet to review air traffic recordings, agency spokesman Peter Knudson said. He said an investigator was being sent to the scene.
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Ultra-Thin Organic Imager Makes the Invisible Visible by Peering Into the Infrared Spectrum
Combining a shortwave infrared photodetector and an OLED display, this flexible biomedical-safe device is a real breakthrough.
A team of researchers from the University of California San Diego, the University of Southern Mississippi, and the Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology (SAIM) have unveiled a large-area yet surprisingly-thin infrared imager which, they say, is flexible, low-cost, and safe for biomedical use.
Shortwave infrared visualisers have a range of uses: Peering through smoke and fog, mapping a person s veins through their skin, remotely monitoring heart rate without physical contact, inspecting electronics through the surface of silicon wafers, and more. Traditional infrared imagers, though, are expensive, bulky, and difficult to build â which is where a new design created by Professor Tina Ng and colleagues comes in.