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Aug 20, 2024

NASA and ISS National Lab Collaborate on $4M Grant for Space-Based Disease Research

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, government

“Space-based research has a long history of contributing to advancements on Earth,” said Dr. Lisa Carnell.


The International Space Station (ISS) has been a beacon of scientific and medical research ever since the station’s first module was launched in 1999, as astronauts continue to push the boundaries regarding microgravity research that has contributed to advancing science and medical knowledge back on Earth. To continue this, NASA and the ISS National Laboratory recently announced a partnership through the ISS National Lab Research Announcement (NLRA) 2024-09: Igniting Innovation: Science in Space to Cure Disease on Earth that will provide up to $4 million with the goal of helping to advance disease diagnosis and treatment back on Earth.

Through collaboration between government agencies, industry, and academia, the NLRA hopes to accomplish several objectives pertaining to developing medical technologies on Earth, including disease mechanism models, population and disease diversity, drug discovery & development, drug delivery, and drug resistance. This announcement comes after the ISS National Laboratory announced in July 2024 that five projects were selected for the Cancer Research in Space for Life on Earth with the goal of providing $7 million in grants to advance cancer research in microgravity onboard the ISS.

Continue reading “NASA and ISS National Lab Collaborate on $4M Grant for Space-Based Disease Research” »

Aug 20, 2024

Iron and Water: How Exoplanets’ Interiors Challenge Traditional Models

Posted by in categories: computing, space

Dr. Caroline Dorn: “The larger the planet and the greater its mass, the more the water tends to go with the iron droplets and become integrated in the core.”


Do certain exoplanets mirror Earth regarding their distribution of iron and water? This is what a recent study published in Nature Astronomy hopes to address as an international team of researchers investigated the evolution of exoplanets and how they form their iron core with water residing either beneath or above the surface, and whether as a liquid or gas. This study holds the potential to help researchers better understand the formation and evolution of exoplanets, which will enable scientists to provide better targets for identifying Earth-like worlds throughout the cosmos.

For the study, the researchers use computer models to simulate the formation of planetary interiors on super-Earth and sub-Neptune exoplanets, specifically with a focus on the distribution of water within a planet’s interior in relation to the additional iron and metallic composition. In the end, the researchers found that longstanding hypotheses about the formation and evolution of water worlds are challenged given the model’s results that 95 percent or more of water on an exoplanet is stored within the planet’s interior, as opposed to the surface.

Continue reading “Iron and Water: How Exoplanets’ Interiors Challenge Traditional Models” »

Aug 20, 2024

Waning Dark Energy May Evade ‘Swampland’ of Impossible Universes

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

The mysterious case of dark energy and the universe’s fate.

Imagine the universe as a vast, ever-expanding balloon.


The largest-ever 3D map of the cosmos hints that the dark energy that’s fueling the universe’s expansion may be weakening. One community of theoretical physicists expected as much.

Continue reading “Waning Dark Energy May Evade ‘Swampland’ of Impossible Universes” »

Aug 20, 2024

Is the Brain A Quantum Computer? New Insights Say It Might Be

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

There is a theory dubbed “quantum consciousness,” which stipulates that brain functions and consciousness are derived from quantum effects like the collapse of the quantum wavefunction.

This is a strange part of quantum physics, where particles go from a state of simultaneous properties to a more “normal” state where they have one defined characteristic. It has notably been popularized by the concept of Schrödinger’s cat.

Aug 20, 2024

Forward: The goal of ADAS is to automate the creation of these complex AI agents by not only inventing new building blocks but also by finding novel ways to combine them

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

One particularly promising method within ADAS involves defining agents in code and using a meta-agent—an AI that can create and improve…

S Hu, C Lu, J Clune [University of British Columbia] (2024) paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.08435 website:

Can AI agents design better AI agents?

Continue reading “Forward: The goal of ADAS is to automate the creation of these complex AI agents by not only inventing new building blocks but also by finding novel ways to combine them” »

Aug 20, 2024

Lightning sparks the discovery of a new electromagnetic wave

Posted by in category: climatology

New electromagnetic wave discovery reshapes our understanding of the impact of lightning on Earth’s magnetosphere.

Aug 20, 2024

May’s Huge Geomagnetic Storm Created A Previously Unseen Vortex In Earth’s Atmosphere

Posted by in category: futurism

And we could be in for more activity like this in the coming months.

Aug 20, 2024

Something Is Wrong with Dark Energy, Physicists Say

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Cosmic surveys suggest the force pulling the universe apart might not be constant after all.

By Rebecca Boyle

Imagine sitting in the center of a firework that has just exploded. After the first flash of light and heat, sparks fly off in all directions, with some streaming together into fiery filaments and others fading quickly into cold, ashy oblivion. After a moment more, the smoke is all that remains—the echo, if you will, of the firework’s big bang.

Aug 20, 2024

Energy from Nuclear Waste: Switzerland Approves first Accellerator-Driven Reactor

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

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Nuclear power is one of the most promising ways to create a clean, cheap, and consistent flow of electricity. Unfortunately, it also produces radioactive waste, which can stick around for…a very long time. However, that waste issue might just be changing thanks to a process called transmutation. A Swiss company just got approval for the first accelerator-driven nuclear reactor that can do transmutation. How does this work? Let’s take a look.

Continue reading “Energy from Nuclear Waste: Switzerland Approves first Accellerator-Driven Reactor” »

Aug 20, 2024

Ever see a Star Explode? You’re about to get a chance very soon

Posted by in categories: energy, physics, space

Every clear night for the last three weeks, Bob Stephens has pointed his home telescope at the same two stars in hopes of witnessing one of the most violent events in the universe—a nova explosion a hundred thousand times brighter than the sun.

The eruption, which scientists say could happen any day now, has excited the interest of major observatories worldwide, and it promises to advance our understanding of turbulent binary star systems.

Yet for all the high-tech observational power that NASA and other scientific institutions can muster, astrophysicists are relying on countless amateur astronomers like Stephens to spot the explosion first.

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