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Mar 15, 2023

The Anthropocene Has Created A New Disease: Plasticosis

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A newly identified disease called Plasticosis is scarring the tissue of seabirds, and probably us as well. Its cause: microplastic pollution.


Plasticosis or Plastic-Induced Fibrotic Disease has been discovered in seabirds caused by ingesting microplastic pollution.

Mar 15, 2023

Power plasma with gigajoule energy turnover generated for eight minutes

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, physics

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After successful recommissioning in autumn 2022, the Greifswald nuclear fusion experiment has surpassed an important target. In 2023, an energy turnover of 1 gigajoule was targeted. Now the researchers have even achieved 1.3 gigajoules and a new record for discharge time on Wendelstein 7-X: the hot plasma could be maintained for eight minutes.

Continue reading “Power plasma with gigajoule energy turnover generated for eight minutes” »

Mar 15, 2023

Enzymes could make it cheaper to recycle waste polyester textiles and bottles than making them from petroleum

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

What do a T-shirt, a rug, and a soda bottle have in common? Many are made from polyethylene terephthalate (PET), a ubiquitous plastic that revolutionized the materials industry after it was patented in the 1940s.

Created from petroleum refining, PET is a material known for its durability and versatility. It is easily molded into airtight containers, woven into durable carpets, or spun into polyester clothing.

“The reality is that most PET products—especially PET clothing and carpeting—are not recycled today using conventional technologies,” explained Gregg Beckham, senior research fellow at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and CEO of the U.S. Department of Energy BOTTLE Consortium. “The is developing promising alternatives, including enzymes designed to depolymerize PET, but even these options have tended to lean on energy-intensive and costly preprocessing steps to be effective.”

Mar 15, 2023

MIT Researchers Solve Dendrites Mystery To Creating Smaller & Lighter Batteries

Posted by in categories: materials, sustainability

A breakthrough regarding dendrites made by MIT researchers may finally open the way to the building of a new type of rechargeable lithium battery that is safer, lighter, and more compact than existing models, a concept that has been pursued by labs all over the world for years.

The replacement of the liquid electrolyte between the positive and negative electrodes with a considerably thinner, lighter layer of solid ceramic material and the replacement of one electrode with solid lithium metal are the two essential components of this prospective advancement in battery technology. By making these changes, the battery’s overall size and weight would be significantly reduced, and the flammable liquid electrolytes that provide a safety risk would be eliminated. Dendrites, however, have proven to be a significant obstacle in that pursuit.

Dendrites are metal growths that can accumulate on the lithium surface, pierce through the solid electrolyte, and finally cross from one electrode to the other, shorting out the battery cell. Their name is from the Latin word for branches. There hasn’t been much advancement in the understanding of what causes these metal filaments or how to stop them from occurring, making lightweight solid-state batteries a problematic alternative.

Mar 15, 2023

Food and Drinks

Posted by in category: food

Articles and videos about Food and Drinks on Fox News.

Mar 15, 2023

Scientists hail DART success 6 months after historic asteroid crash

Posted by in category: space

Scientists shared the latest results from the DART mission this week, six months after its impact into the asteroid Dimorphos.

Mar 15, 2023

Ex-OpenAI employees launch new AI chatbot Claude to compete with ChatGPT

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

By Ankita Chakravarti: ChatGPT, which is the fastest growing app in the world, has competition now. After Microsoft’ Bing and Google’s Bard AI, Anthropic, which was founded by former OpenAI employees, has launched a new AI chatbot to rival ChatGPT. The company claims that Claude is “easier to converse with” “more steerable.” and “much less likely to produce harmful outputs,”

Claude performs pretty well and has the same functions as the ChatGPT. “Claude can help with use cases including summarization, search, creative and collaborative writing, Q&A, coding, and more. Early customers report that Claude is much less likely to produce harmful outputs, easier to converse with, and more steerable — so you can get your desired output with less effort. Claude can also take direction on personality, tone, and behavior,” the company said in a blog post.

Continue reading “Ex-OpenAI employees launch new AI chatbot Claude to compete with ChatGPT” »

Mar 15, 2023

Sniper2L is a high-fidelity Cas9 variant with high activity Chemical Biology

Posted by in categories: biological, chemistry, evolution

Kim et al. used directed evolution methods to identify a high-fidelity SpCas9 variant, Sniper2L, which exhibits high general activity but maintains high specificity at a large number of target sites.

Mar 15, 2023

Shadows in the Big Bang Afterglow Reveal Invisible Cosmic Structures

Posted by in category: cosmology

Over the course of its nearly 14-billion-year journey, the light from the CMB has been stretched, squeezed and warped by all the matter in its way. Cosmologists are beginning to look beyond the primary fluctuations in the CMB light to the secondary imprints left by interactions with galaxies and other cosmic structures. From these signals, they’re gaining a crisper view of the distribution of both ordinary matter — everything that’s composed of atomic parts — and the mysterious dark matter. In turn, those insights are helping to settle some long-standing cosmological mysteries and pose some new ones.

“We’re realizing that the CMB does not only tell us about the initial conditions of the universe. It also tells us about the galaxies themselves,” said Emmanuel Schaan, also a cosmologist at SLAC. “And that turns out to be really powerful.”

Mar 15, 2023

High-performance photon detectors to combat spies in the quantum computing age

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics

How can we combat data theft, which is a real issue for society? Quantum physics has the solution. Its theories make it possible to encode information (a qubit) in single particles of light (a photon) and to circulate them in an optical fiber in a highly secure way. However, the widespread use of this telecommunications technology is hampered in particular by the performance of the single-photon detectors.

A team from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), together with the company ID Quantique, has succeeded in increasing their speed by a factor of twenty. This innovation, published in the journal Nature Photonics, makes it possible to achieve unprecedented performances in quantum .

Buying a train ticket, booking a taxi, getting a meal delivered: these are all transactions carried out daily via . These are based on payment systems involving an exchange of secret information between the user and the bank. To do this, the bank generates a , which is transmitted to their customer, and a private key, which it keeps secret. With the public key, the user can modify the information, make it unreadable and send it to the bank. With the private key, the bank can decipher it.