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Feb 20, 2022

Could This Antioxidant-Rich Supplement Be The Key To A Long, Healthy Life?*

Posted by in category: health

Vitamin C has long been known as an essential nutrient for skin health and immune function, but it turns out its antioxidant activity plays a large role in those properties (among others).*.

Feb 20, 2022

Planes struggle to land at London’s Heathrow Airport as Storm Eunice continues to batter northern Europe

Posted by in category: transportation

At least four people have died across the region.

Feb 20, 2022

Human Neurons Found to be Surprisingly Different From Other Mammals

Posted by in categories: education, neuroscience, particle physics

Ion channels are crucial for neural communication; they control the flow and gradient of charged particles, creating electrical signals. Recent work report | Neuroscience.


In this study, the researchers assessed how dense ion channels were packed in the membranes of neuronal cells from ten species of mammals, including mice, rats, rabbits, ferrets, macaques, marmosets, macaques, humans, and one of the smallest known mammals, an animal called the Etruscan shrew. The team focused on a type of excitatory neuron typically found in the cortex of the brain, and three ion channels that are in the membranes of those cells; two are voltage-gated ion channels that control the movement of potassium, another is called the HCN channel and both potassium and sodium ions can flow through it.

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Feb 20, 2022

Are Space Elevators Growing Closer to Reality?

Posted by in categories: business, space

Theories on how to build a space elevator have been around for decades. Scientists say not only would such technology change humanity, but that we could have built one by now.

#Space #Moonshot #BloombergQuicktake.
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Feb 19, 2022

DIY Float Valve For Passive Hydroponics Leverages 3D Printing

Posted by in categories: 3D printing, habitats

[Billy] has a special interest in passive hydroponics (also known as the Kratky method), which is a way of growing plants in nutrient-rich water that does not circulate. As the plant grows and liquid level drops, only the tips of the roots remain submerged while more and more of the root surface is exposed to oxygen in a harmonious balance. However, “thirsty” plant types (tomatoes, for example) throw off this balance, and the system needs to be modified. To address this, [Billy] designed and printed a passive float valve system that takes care of topping up the reservoir only when needed, without using pumps or any other electrical equipment.

Commercial or industrial float valves are too big to use in his small tanks, which led [Billy] to test dozens of DIY designs. He used everything from plastic water bottles to pipe ends, but nothing quite measured up. With 3D printing, [Billy] was able to create a sealed, lightweight float that exactly matched the housing and tube locations.

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Feb 19, 2022

Bionic eyes: Obsolete tech leaves patients in the dark

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, cyborgs, transhumanism

The retinal-implant manufacturer has shifted its focus, leaving users with little or no support.

Feb 19, 2022

DIY Hydrophone Listens In On The Deep For Cheap

Posted by in categories: electronics, military

The microphone is a pretty ubiquitous piece of technology that we’re all familiar with, but what if you’re not looking to record audio in the air, and instead want to listen in on what’s happening underwater? That’s a job for a hydrophone! Unfortunately, hydrophones aren’t exactly the kind of thing you’re likely to find at the big-box electronics store. Luckily for us, [Jules Ryckebusch] picked up a few tricks in his 20-year career as a Navy submariner, and has documented his process for building a sensitive hydrophone without needing a military budget.

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Feb 19, 2022

Housing unaffordability is the result of artificial scarcity

Posted by in categories: economics, habitats

We can summarize this as:

Price = Demand / Supply.

When there is more demand or less supply, the price goes up. When there is less demand or more supply, the price goes down. This is basic economics.

Feb 19, 2022

Using machine learning to understand how brain cells work

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, robotics/AI

For something so small, neurons can be quite complex—not only because there are billions of them in a brain, but because their function can be influenced by many factors, like their shape and genetic makeup.

A research team led by Daifeng Wang, a Waisman Center professor of biostatistics and medical informatics and computer sciences at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, is adapting machine learning and artificial intelligence techniques to better understand how a variety of traits together affect the way work and behave.

Called manifold learning, the approach may help researchers better understand and even predict brain disorders by looking at specific neuronal properties. The Wang lab recently published its findings in two studies.

Feb 19, 2022

A Window Into the Future of Wave Energy

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

Award Helps Move Cost-Effective, Productive, Robust Wave Energy Design a Step Closer to Commercialization and Widespread Use

In 1974, Stephen Salter, a professor at the University of Edinburgh, sent his “ducks” into the Scottish seas, launching the world’s first major wave energy project. But the ocean’s rough heaves and surges proved too much for his house-sized, floating generators. Like the more recent Pelamis’ P-750 model and Aquamarine’s Oysters, they succumbed to the power they were meant to harness.

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