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Nov 11, 2024

The Big Bang Is Beyond Doubt. An Expert Reveals Why

Posted by in category: cosmology

How did everything begin? It’s a question that humans have pondered for thousands of years. Over the last century or so, science has homed in on an answer: the Big Bang.

This describes how the Universe was born in a cataclysmic explosion almost 14 billion years ago. In a tiny fraction of a second, the observable universe grew by the equivalent of a bacterium expanding to the size of the Milky Way. The early universe was extraordinarily hot and extremely dense. But how do we know this happened?

Continue reading “The Big Bang Is Beyond Doubt. An Expert Reveals Why” »

Nov 11, 2024

Why does our universe have something instead of nothing?

Posted by in category: futurism

In order to figure out how something came from nothing, we first need to explore the different types of nothing.

By Kelsey Johnson

Nov 11, 2024

Scientists Caught Sperm Defying One of The Laws of Physics

Posted by in categories: biological, mathematics, physics, sex

With their slender tails, human sperm propel themselves through viscous fluids, seemingly in defiance of Newton’s third law of motion, according to a recent study that characterizes the motion of these sex cells and single-celled algae.

Kenta Ishimoto, a mathematical scientist at Kyoto University, and colleagues investigated these non-reciprocal interactions in sperm and other microscopic biological swimmers, to figure out how they slither through substances that should, in theory, resist their movement.

When Newton conceived his now-famed laws of motion in 1686, he sought to explain the relationship between a physical object and the forces acting upon it with a few neat principles that, it turns out, don’t necessarily apply to microscopic cells wriggling through sticky fluids.

Nov 11, 2024

We Finally Know Where Most Meteorites on Earth Actually Came From

Posted by in categories: materials, space

Until now, only a small fraction of meteorites that land on Earth had been firmly linked back to their parent body out in space – but a set of new studies has just given us compelling origin stories for more than 90 percent of meteorites today.

Past analyses of meteorites striking our planet today suggest some kind of shared origin; they’re made from very similar materials and have been baked by cosmic radiation for a suspiciously short amount of time, hinting at a relatively recent break-up from shared parent bodies.

The teams behind three new published papers used a combination of super-detailed telescope observations and computer modeling simulations to compare asteroids out in space with meteorites recovered on Earth, matching up rock types and orbital paths between the two.

Nov 11, 2024

Robots chisel out the future of sculpture as some artists embrace change and others push back

Posted by in categories: futurism, robotics/AI

Instead of the old-fashioned hammer and chisel, a 13-foot zinc alloy arm with a spinning, diamond-crusted finger is now used by some to cut marble. Robotor CEO Giacomo Massari says it’s ten times faster.


A fleet of marble-sculpting robots is carving out the future of the art world. It’s a move some artists see as cheating, but others are embracing the change.

Nov 11, 2024

Uncovering the effect of low-frequency static magnetic field on tendon-derived cells: from mechanosensing to tenogenesis

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Magnetotherapy has been receiving increased attention as an attractive strategy for modulating cell physiology directly at the site of injury, thereby providing the medical community with a safe and non-invasive therapy.


Pesqueira, T., Costa-Almeida, R. & Gomes, M.E. Sci Rep 7, 10,948 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-11253-6

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Continue reading “Uncovering the effect of low-frequency static magnetic field on tendon-derived cells: from mechanosensing to tenogenesis” »

Nov 10, 2024

Bioinspired hydrogels harness sunlight: A step closer to artificial photosynthesis

Posted by in categories: chemistry, solar power, sustainability

Mimicking how plants convert sunlight into energy has long been a dream for scientists aiming to create renewable energy solutions. Artificial photosynthesis is a process that seeks to replicate nature’s method, using sunlight to drive chemical reactions that generate clean energy. However, creating synthetic systems that work as organically as natural photosynthesis has been a significant challenge until now.

Nov 10, 2024

Tesla Rolls Out Major FSD Update with Neural Network Shift

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI, transportation

Tesla began rolling out a significant update to its Full Self-Driving (FSD) software on Saturday, shifting the city-streets driving system to a single, end-to-end neural network model in FSD version 12.5.6.3.

Last week, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said the company’s FSD technology “is now almost entirely AI.” In early October, Musk had stated that FSD “will soon exceed 10,000 miles between critical interventions, which is a year of driving for most people.”

Nov 10, 2024

Apple’s $1.5 Billion Mobile Service Satellites Will Be Launched By SpaceX

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, satellites

SpaceX will launch Apple partner Globalstar’s new MSS satellites as part of the iPhone’s satellite connectivity features.

Nov 10, 2024

Flexible circuits made with silk and graphene

Posted by in categories: computing, materials

After thousands of years as a highly valuable commodity, silk continues to surprise. Now it may help usher in a whole new direction for microelectronics and computing.

While silk protein has been deployed in designer electronics, its use is currently limited in part because silk fibers are a messy tangle of spaghetti-like strands.

Now, a research team led by scientists at the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has tamed the tangle. They report in the journal Science Advances (“Two-dimensional silk”) that they have achieved a uniform two-dimensional (2D) layer of silk protein fragments, or “fibroins,” on graphene, a carbon-based material useful for its excellent electrical conductivity.

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