AI Research
SpaceX Starship test fails after Texas launch
The latest test of Space X’s giant Starship rocket has failed, minutes after launch.
Officials at Elon Musk’s company said the upper stage was lost after problems developed after lift-off from Texas on Thursday.
But the Super Heavy booster managed to return to its launchpad as planned, prompting an eruption of applause from ground control teams.
The mission came hours after the first flight of the Blue Origin New Glenn rocket system, backed by Amazon boss Jeff Bezos.
The two tech billionaires both want to dominate the space vehicle market.
“Starship experienced a rapid unscheduled disassembly during its ascent burn. Teams will continue to review data from today’s flight test to better understand root cause,” SpaceX posted on X.
“With a test like this, success comes from what we learn, and today’s flight will help us improve Starship’s reliability.”
Unverified footage shared on social media shows what appears to be the rocket breaking up in flames.
And footage showed orange balls of light flying across the sky over the Haitian capital of Port-Au-Prince, leaving a trail of smoke behind.
“Success is uncertain, but entertainment is guaranteed!” Mr Musk posted on X, sharing a video showing a fiery trail streaking though the sky.
He also said “improved versions” of the ship and booster were “already waiting for launch”.
“Preliminary indication is that we had an oxygen/fuel leak in the cavity above the ship engine firewall that was large enough to build pressure in excess of the vent capacity,” Musk said a short while later, adding that “nothing so far suggests pushing next launch past next month”.
Footage of the launch clocked up 7.2m views, according to a SpaceX livestream.
The Starship system had lifted off from Boca Chica, Texas, at 17:38 EST (22:38 GMT) in the company’s seventh test mission.
The Starship upper stage separated from its Super Heavy booster nearly four minutes into flight as planned.
But then SpaceX communications manager Dan Huot reported on a live stream that mission teams had lost contact with the ship.
The Super Heavy booster managed to return to its launchpad roughly seven minutes after lift-off as planned, prompting an eruption of applause from ground control teams.
The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said it was aware “an anomaly occurred” during the SpaceX mission.
“The FAA briefly slowed and diverted aircraft around the area where space vehicle debris was falling. Normal operations have resumed,” it said in a statement.
It comes a day after a SpaceX rocket blasted off from Florida carrying two privately constructed lunar landers and a micro rover to the Moon.
The uncrewed Falcon 9 launched from the Kennedy Space Center on Wednesday.
And Bezos’ Blue Origin company successfully launched a rocket into orbit for the first time.
It was a huge step forward for Bezos and his company that has spent years getting to the point of sending a rocket into orbit.
AI Research
Frontiers broadens AI‑driven integrity checks with dual integration
Frontiers has announced that external fraud‑screening tools – Cactus Communications’ Paperpal Preflight, and Clear Skies’ Papermill Alarm and Oversight – have been integrated into its own Artificial Intelligence Review Assistant (AIRA) submission-screening system.
The expansion delivers what the companies describe as “an unprecedented, multilayered defence against organised research fraud, strengthening the reliability and integrity of every manuscript submitted to Frontiers”.
AIRA was launched in 2018, making Frontiers one of the early adopters of AI in submission checking. In 2022, Frontiers added its own papermill check to its comprehensive catalogue of AIRA checks, with the aim of tackling the industry-wide problem of manufactured manuscripts. The latest version, released in 2025, uses more than 15 data points and signals of potential manufactured manuscripts to be investigated and validated by a human expert.
Dr Elena Vicario, Head of Research Integrity at Frontiers, said: “Maintaining trust in the scholarly record demands constant innovation. By combining the unique strengths of Clear Skies and Cactus with our own AI capabilities, we are raising the bar for integrity screening and giving editors and reviewers the confidence that every submission has been rigorously vetted.”
Commenting on the importance of the partnership, Nikesh Gosalia, President, Global Academic and Publisher Relations at Cactus Communications, said: “This partnership with Frontiers reflects the confidence leading publishers have in our AI-driven solutions. Paperpal Preflight is a vital tool that supports editorial teams and existing homegrown solutions in identifying and addressing potential issues early in the publishing workflow.
“As one of the world’s largest and most impactful research publishers, Frontiers is taking an important step in strengthening research integrity, and we are proud to collaborate with them in this mission of safeguarding research.”
Adam Day, Founder and CEO of Clear Skies, added: “Clear Skies is thrilled to be working with the innovative team at Frontiers to integrate AIRA with Oversight. This integration makes our multi-award-winning services, including the Papermill Alarm, available across the Frontiers portfolio.
“Oversight is the first index of research integrity and recipient of the inaugural EPIC Award for integrity tools from the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP). As well as providing strategic Oversight to publishers, our detailed article reports support human Oversight of research integrity investigations on publications as well as journal submissions.”
AI Research
Australia’s China AI quandary is a dealmaker’s opportunity
It is not surprising that reactions to Chinese ambassador Xiao Qian’s suggestion that Australia and China cooperate more on artificial intelligence as part of an expanded Free Trade Agreement have been hawkish. However, it highlights the need for Australian organisations to broaden their view on the AI world.
It would take a dramatic shift in policy position for Australia to suddenly start collaborating with China on AI infrastructure such as data centres and the equipment that runs them. But it would be wrong to assume that advances in capability will always come from America first.
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AI Research
Joint UT, Yale research develops AI tool for heart analysis – The Daily Texan
A study published on June 23 in collaboration with UT and Yale researchers developed an artificial intelligence tool capable of performing and analyzing the heart using echocardiography.
The app, PanEcho, can analyze echocardiograms, or pictures of the heart, using ultrasounds. The tool was developed and trained on nearly one million echocardiographic videos. It can perform 39 echocardiographic tasks and accurately detect conditions such as systolic dysfunction and severe aortic stenosis.
“Our teammates helped identify a total of 39 key measurements and labels that are part of a complete echocardiographic report — basically what a cardiologist would be expected to report on when they’re interpreting an exam,” said Gregory Holste, an author of the study and a doctoral candidate in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. “We train the model to predict those 39 labels. Once that model is trained, you need to evaluate how it performs across those 39 tasks, and we do that through this robust multi site validation.”
Holste said out of the functions PanEcho has, one of the most impressive is its ability to measure left ventricular ejection fraction, or the proportion of blood the left ventricle of the heart pumps out, far more accurately than human experts. Additionally, Holste said PanEcho can analyze the heart as a whole, while humans are limited to looking at the heart from one view at a time.
“What is most unique about PanEcho is that it can do this by synthesizing information across all available views, not just curated single ones,” Holste said. “PanEcho integrates information from the entire exam — from multiple views of the heart to make a more informed, holistic decision about measurements like ejection fraction.”
PanEcho is available for open-source use to allow researchers to use and experiment with the tool for future studies. Holste said the team has already received emails from people trying to “fine-tune” the application for different uses.
“We know that other researchers are working on adapting PanEcho to work on pediatric scans, and this is not something that PanEcho was trained to do out of the box,” Holste said. “But, because it has seen so much data, it can fine-tune and adapt to that domain very quickly. (There are) very exciting possibilities for future research.”
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