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Jun 14, 2022

UK Military Wants to Install Quantum Computers in Tanks for Some Reason

Posted by in categories: computing, military, quantum physics

Deployment of portable quantum computer systems.


Looks like the United Kingdom wants to create smart tanks, because it’s using a new quantum computer to put more tech in its arsenal.

Jun 14, 2022

The Human Brain Runs Way Hotter Than We Ever Realized, Scientists Find

Posted by in categories: computing, neuroscience, sex

From the engine in your car to the components in your laptop, mechanical systems tend to heat up when they’re working harder. Now new research has revealed that the same can be said of the brain – and it runs hotter than was previously thought.

Some parts of the deep brain can get up to 40 °C (104 °F), a new study shows, though this varies by sex, time of day, and various other factors. Compare that with the average oral temperature in human bodies, which is typically under 37 °C (98.6 °F).

This isn’t a sign of malfunctioning though, researchers think, and may actually be evidence that the brain is operating healthily. Unusual heat signatures could potentially be used in the future to look for signs of brain damage or disorder.

Jun 14, 2022

Scientists accidentally discover black hole so big you can spot it with a backyard telescope

Posted by in category: cosmology

Now, an international team of researchers say they have discovered a supermassive black hole that gobbles up the equivalent of one Earth every second.

By looking at other luminous objects that are billions of years old, the team confirmed the newly discovered behemoth was the brightest and fastest-growing supermassive black hole of the past 9 billion years (that we know of).

Located in the bright constellation of Centaurus, this luminous cosmic beast is more than 500 times larger than the supermassive black hole at the centre of our own galaxy.

Jun 14, 2022

New potential diabetes treatment regenerates insulin-producing cells

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

An emerging way to treat diabetes is to repair or replace the cells in the body that naturally produce insulin. Swedish researchers have now identified a molecule that helps stimulate the growth of new insulin-producing cells, and uncovered how it works, opening up new potential diabetes treatments.

Diabetes is characterized by issues with insulin, the hormone that regulates blood glucose levels and allows the body’s cells to access it for energy. In type 1 diabetes, beta cells in the pancreas that normally produce insulin can’t make enough to meet demand, often because those cells have been destroyed by the immune system.

Treatment currently relies on administering insulin shots, but an emerging branch of study centers on finding ways to replenish the insulin production of those beta cells. Previous breakthroughs have included creating artificial beta cells that can pick up the slack, or using stem cells to grow new ones.

Jun 14, 2022

Amazon Robotics supports Georgia Tech startup incubator

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Amazon Robotics announced a three-year investment to the Georgia Tech’s Advanced Technology Development Center (ATDC) to help support the growth of startups and… See more.


Funding will go toward assisting diverse entrepreneurs in the fields of robotics and automation.

Jun 14, 2022

Hubble spies stellar ‘ghost’ wandering the Milky Way galaxy

Posted by in category: cosmology

For the first time, the Hubble Space Telescope has detected a lone object drifting through our Milky Way galaxy – the invisible, ghostly remains of a once radiant star.

When stars massive enough to dwarf our sun die, they explode in a supernova and the remaining core is crushed by its own gravity, forming a black hole.

Sometimes, the explosion may send the black hole into motion, hurtling across the galaxy like a pinball. By rights, there should be a lot of roving black holes known to scientists, but they are practically invisible in space and therefore very difficult to uncover.

Jun 14, 2022

Constant Renewal: Your Liver Is Just Under Three Years Old

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Using retrospective radiocarbon birth dating, an international team of scientists shows that the human liver stays young throughout life and is on average less than three years old.

As one of the major organs of the body, the liver performs many essential biological functions. Almost all the blood in a person’s body passes through the liver, where waste products, worn-out cells, and toxins are filtered. It also produces bile, a solution that helps digest fats and eliminate waste products. Those are just a couple of the major duties it performs — more ore than 500 vital functions have been identified with the liver.

The liver is an essential organ that takes care of detoxifying our bodies. It is prone to injury because it is constantly exposed to toxic substances. To overcome this, the liver has a unique capacity among organs to regenerate itself after damage. Because a lot of the body’s ability to heal and regenerate itself decreases as we age, scientists were wondering if the liver’s capacity to renew also diminishes with age.

Jun 14, 2022

Harvard Scientists Have Developed a Revolutionary New Treatment for Diabetes

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

University of Missouri scientists are partnering with Harvard and Georgia Tech to create a new diabetes treatment that involves transplanting insulin-producing pancreatic cells. Type 1 diabetes is estimated to affect around 1.8 million Americans. Although type 1 diabetes often develops in childhood or adolescence, it can occur in adulthood…

Jun 14, 2022

A celestial loner might be the first known rogue black hole

Posted by in category: cosmology

The object could be the first isolated stellar-mass black hole identified in the Milky Way — or it might be an unusually heavy neutron star.

Jun 14, 2022

A New Way To Generate Insulin-Producing Cells

Posted by in category: futurism

Study shows how a newly identified molecule stimulates the formation of new insulin-producing cells in zebrafish and mammalian tissue, through a novel mechanism for regulating protein synthesis.