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Mar 30, 2023
Scientists Discover Giant Red Spider That Can Live for 20 Years
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Australian scientists have just discovered a new species of arachnid, dubbed the giant trapdoor spider, in Queensland. Itâs huge, bright red, and it can live for up to two decades.
Before you panic, we should note that trapdoor spiders arenât considered a threat to humans. While they are venomous, their bites arenât known to have any lasting effect on people, reports the BBC. Besides, hikers rarely encounter them; the spiders are nocturnal and spend most of their lives underground. And while theyâre big for trapdoor spiders, theyâre not as massive as, say, tarantulas or giant desert scorpions.
Female giant trapdoor spiders can grow up to two inches long. Thatâs about twice the size of other trapdoor spiders. Male trapdoor spiders are slightly smaller.
Mar 30, 2023
OpenAI CEO responds to Jordan Peterson criticism | Sam Altman and Lex Fridman
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: robotics/AI
Lex Fridman Podcast full episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L_Guz73e6fw.
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Sam Altman is the CEO of OpenAI, the company behind GPT-4, ChatGPT, DALL-E, Codex, and many other state-of-the-art AI technologies.
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Mar 30, 2023
Experiment finds gluon mass in the proton
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: particle physics
Nuclear physicists may have finally pinpointed where in the proton a large fraction of its mass resides. A recent experiment carried out at the U.S. Department of Energyâs Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility has revealed the radius of the protonâs mass that is generated by the strong force as it glues together the protonâs building block quarks. The result was recently published in Nature.
One of the biggest mysteries of the proton is the origin of its mass. It turns out that the protonâs measured mass doesnât just come from its physical building blocks, its three so-called valence quarks.
âIf you add up the Standard Model masses of the quarks in a proton, you only get a small fraction of the protonâs mass,â explained experiment co-spokesperson Sylvester Joosten, an experimental physicist at DOEâs Argonne National Laboratory.
Mar 30, 2023
Journey to the center of a black hole: Scientists discover what lies beyond the event horizon
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: cosmology, particle physics
Scientists relied on the holographic principle, which suggests that the two existing theories â particles and gravity â are equivalent.
Mar 30, 2023
Digging into DNA Repair with Optical Tweezer Technology
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: biotech/medical
Combining an optical tweezer technology called C-trap that manipulates a single molecule of DNA and a novel approach, researchers were able to receive a detailed view into how cells find and repair damaged DNA.
Their findings are described in an article titled, âSingle-molecule analysis of DNA-binding proteins from nuclear extracts (SMADNE),â published in Nucleic Acids Research.
In the new study, the researchers used the C-trap to investigate how different DNA repair proteins identify and bind to their respective forms of damage.
Mar 30, 2023
Archaeologists Studying an Enigmatic Stone Structure in the Saudi Arabian Desert Have Turned Up Evidence of a Neolithic Cultic Belief
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: futurism
More than 260 fragments of animal bones have been found at the monument.
Artnet News, March 29, 2023.
Mar 30, 2023
Study reveals origin of superconductivity in nickelates
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: entertainment, materials
Nickelates are a material class that has excited scientists because of its recently discovered superconducting ability, and now a new study led by Cornell has changed where scientists thought this ability might originate, providing a blueprint for how more functional versions might be engineered in the future.
Superconductivity was predicted in nickel-based oxide compounds, or nickelates, more than 20 years ago, yet only realized experimentally for the first time in 2019, and only in samples that are grown as very thin, crystalline filmsâless than 20 nanometers thickâlayered on a supporting substrate material.
Researchers worldwide have been working to better understand the microscopic details and origins of superconductivity in nickelates in an effort to create samples that successfully superconduct in macroscopic âbulkâ crystalline form, but have yet to be successful. This limitation led some researchers to speculate that superconductivity was not being hosted in the nickelate film, but rather at the atomic interface where the film and substrate meet.
Mar 30, 2023
Artificial Cells â The Powerhouse of the Future
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical
Assessing how energy-generating synthetic organelles could sustain artificial cells.
Researchers have assessed the progress and challenges in creating artificial mitochondria and chloroplasts for energy production in synthetic cells. These artificial organelles could potentially enable the development of new organisms or biomaterials. The researchers identified proteins as the most crucial components for molecular rotary machinery, proton transport, and ATP production, which serves as the cellâs primary energy currency.
Energy production in nature is the responsibility of chloroplasts and mitochondria and is crucial for fabricating sustainable, synthetic cells in the lab. Mitochondria are not only âthe powerhouses of the cell,â as the middle school biology adage goes, but also one of the most complex intracellular components to replicate artificially.
Mar 30, 2023
Scientists spot a black hole 33 billion times bigger than the sun
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: cosmology, futurism
The âultramassiveâ black hole discovery has big implications for our future understanding of space.