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Sep 24, 2022

Scientists drilled two miles into the tectonic plate to understand Japan’s ‘great earthquake’

Posted by in category: energy

Scientists from the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Washington in the U.S. have discovered links to Japan’s next “great earthquake” after drilling deep into the underseas.

The researchers found that the tectonic stress in Japan’s Nankai subduction zone is less than expected after studying an earthquake fault, Phys.org reported on Thursday.

“This is the heart of the subduction zone, right above where the fault is locked, where the expectation was that the system should be storing energy between earthquakes,” said Demian Saffer, director of the University of Texas Institute for Geophysics (UTIG).

Sep 24, 2022

New genetically engineered herpes virus kills cancer cells

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

A genetically modified version of the herpes virus has shown great potential in treating advanced cancers, according to a report by the Institute of Cancer Research in London published on Thursday.

A promising therapy

Although the treatment is still in early trials, researchers have found that RP2, a modified version of the herpes simplex virus, managed to kill cancer cells in a quarter of patients. The patients had cancers so advanced and complicated that they had run out of treatments to try.

Sep 24, 2022

Salk scientists modify CRISPR to epigenetically treat diabetes, kidney disease, muscular dystrophy

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics

Circa 2017 face_with_colon_three


LA JOLLA—Salk scientists have created a new version of the CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing technology that allows them to activate genes without creating breaks in the DNA, potentially circumventing a major hurdle to using gene editing technologies to treat human diseases.

Continue reading “Salk scientists modify CRISPR to epigenetically treat diabetes, kidney disease, muscular dystrophy” »

Sep 24, 2022

The Battery Wars Are Heating Up in a Good Way

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The competition for lithium-ion batteries is heating up in a good way.


And then there are lithium-metal solid-state batteries which promise to be safer, faster charging and last longer than existing lithium-ion technology.

The State of Aluminium-Sulphur Batteries

Continue reading “The Battery Wars Are Heating Up in a Good Way” »

Sep 24, 2022

Space Sex is Serious Business

Posted by in categories: business, sex, space

We’ve done almost no research into this area, but human reproduction in space is going to be key to us living on Mars.

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Continue reading “Space Sex is Serious Business” »

Sep 24, 2022

Climate extremes, viruses, social unrest … war? We desperately need a Plan B

Posted by in category: climatology

This is a guest piece by Richard Fox – retired media director, now a singer/songwriter and blogger who writes on a variety of topics. You can.

Sep 24, 2022

A third of scientists working on AI say it could cause global disaster

Posted by in categories: existential risks, robotics/AI

A survey of artificial intelligence researchers found that 36 per cent believe AIs could cause a catastrophe on the scale of nuclear war.

Sep 24, 2022

Black Holes

Posted by in categories: cosmology, space travel

Issac Arthur play list.


SFIA looks at uses for black holes ranging from spaceships to artificial worlds to escaping the Heat Death of the Universe.

Sep 24, 2022

The Google Project

Posted by in categories: entertainment, media & arts

Film : colossus: the forbin project.

Music : erste, unversicherte allgemeinheit — extrawelt

Sep 24, 2022

New Invention Triggers One of Quantum Mechanics’ Strangest and Most Useful Phenomena

Posted by in categories: computing, encryption, nanotechnology, quantum physics

By helping scientists control a strange but useful phenomenon of quantum mechanics, an ultrathin invention could make future computing, sensing, and encryption technologies remarkably smaller and more powerful. The device is described in new research that was recently published in the journal Science.

This device could replace a roomful of equipment to link photons in a bizarre quantum effect called entanglement, according to scientists at Sandia National Laboratories and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light. It is a kind of nano-engineered material called a metasurface and paves the way for entangling photons in complex ways that have not been possible with compact technologies.

When photons are said to be entangled, it means they are linked in such a way that actions on one affect the other, no matter where or how far apart the photons are in the universe. It is a spooky effect of quantum mechanics, the laws of physics that govern particles and other very tiny things.