Page 4977
Apr 4, 2022
Fmr. Marine Elliot Ackerman: Ukraine Has a Three-to-One Advantage | Amanpour and Company
Posted by Sergio Tarrero in category: ethics
Elliot Ackerman is following the crisis in Ukraine closely. The author and former U.S. marine served five tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan and has just spent two weeks in Kyiv. Ackerman joins Walter Isaacson to discuss Russia’s new tactics and the role of moral resolve in war.
Originally aired on March 30, 2022
How will it all end? By an asteroid, a science experiment gone wrong, or even a zombie invasion? Check out today’s insane new video to find out all the possible ways the world could actually come to an end!
🔔 SUBSCRIBE TO THE INFOGRAPHICS SHOW ►
Continue reading “Events That Will Cause the End of the World” »
Apr 4, 2022
Astronomy tests the QHY 410C, a color camera without the noise
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: computing, space
Move aside CCDs. Consumer CMOS cameras are here to stay.
For 20 years, I have been using charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras, and I currently own the top-of-the-line SBIG STX-16803. But while studying two images I recently made using the latest QHY 410C CMOS camera, I had to wonder: Is CCD dead?
For years, I lectured about the asymptotic boundary of noise in CCD images. In a basic sense, this means that no matter how many frames you take to increase your signal-to-noise ratio for a cleaner image, you will always run into a wall of noise when you stretch your image to bring out deep shadows. But with QHY’s new CMOS camera, this troublesome wall of noise is nonexistent.
Continue reading “Astronomy tests the QHY 410C, a color camera without the noise” »
Apr 4, 2022
How a Seagen cancer drug with Nobel Prize science might also work in diabetes
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in categories: biotech/medical, science
Some diabetes therapies work by ramping up the body’s secretion of insulin to counteract high blood sugar levels. | Preserving insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells—rather than exhausting them—might be a better strategy in the treatment of diabetes. Following that thinking, scientists at the Karolinska Institute found a cancer drug by Seagen holds promise for the metabolic disease.
Apr 4, 2022
Musk’s SpaceX to launch artificial meat experiment to ISS next week: ‘Steak for space’
Posted by Kelvin Dafiaghor in category: space travel
AN EXPERIMENT that could pave the way for the growth of artificial steaks in space to feed future astronauts is to launch next week on the first mission to carry an all-private crew up to the International Space Station (ISS).
Reverse osmosis waste system circa 2019.
Facility uses sophisticated technology to transform wastewater into clean water.
Apr 4, 2022
Why Going Faster-Than-Light Leads to Time Paradoxes
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: alien life, habitats, media & arts, quantum physics, time travel
►Is faster-than-light (FTL) travel possible? In most discussions of this, we get hung up on the physics of particular ideas, such as wormholes or warp drives. But today, we take a more zoomed out approach that addresses all FTL propulsion — as well as FTL messaging. Because it turns out that they all allow for time travel. Join us today as we explore why this is so and the profound consequences that ensue. Special thanks to Prof Matt.
Written & presented by Prof David Kipping. Special thanks to Prof Matt Buckley for fact checking and his great blog article that inspired this video (http://www.physicsmatt.com/blog/2016/8/25/why-ftl-implies-time-travel)
Continue reading “Why Going Faster-Than-Light Leads to Time Paradoxes” »
Apr 4, 2022
Life may actually flash before your eyes on death
Posted by Muhammad Furqan in category: neuroscience
Scientists who “accidentally” made the first ever recording of a dying brain saw startling results.
Scientists — who “accidentally” made the first ever recording of a dying brain — saw startling results.
Apr 3, 2022
Scientists found the center of the solar system
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: internet, space
Stephen Taylor, assistant professor of physics and astronomy and former astronomer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), said, “Using the pulsars we observe across the Milky Way galaxy, we are trying to be like a spider sitting in stillness in the middle of her web. How well we understand the solar system barycenter is critical as we attempt to sense even the smallest tingle to the web. The solar system barycenter, its center of gravity, is the location where the masses of all planets, moons, and asteroids balance out.”
So, where is the center of the solar system?
It is not in the center of the Sun as many might assume, instead it is closer to the surface of the star. This is due to Jupiter’s mass and our imperfect knowledge of its orbit.