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Oct 3, 2021

Glass Made of Wood Outperforms Traditional Glass In Nearly Every Way

Posted by in category: futurism

This new see-through wood alternative to glass has better heat-insulating properties to reduce your cost of heating and cooling.

Oct 3, 2021

Is A Maine Coon Part Raccoon?

Posted by in category: futurism

– Maine Coon Central


With so many people questioning the Maine Coon’s mysterious origins, it’s not surprising that bizarre queries like, ‘Is a Maine Coon Part Raccoon?’ have been asked!

Continue reading “Is A Maine Coon Part Raccoon?” »

Oct 3, 2021

Bio-Hackers Figured Out How to Inject Human Eyes With Night Vision, And It’s Still Creepy as Hell

Posted by in category: genetics

Circa 2015


Scientists have determined how a particular gene makes night vision possible. The study focuses on a gene called nyctalopin. Mutations in the gene result in inherited “night blindness,” a loss of vision in low-light environments.

Oct 3, 2021

Muon g-2 experiment results: Physicists may have discovered a new force of nature

Posted by in category: physics

Scientists found new evidence this year that muons may behave in a way that defies existing physics. Their magnetism may be caused by a new, fifth force.

Oct 3, 2021

The Music of Proteins Is Made Audible Through a Computer Program That Learns From Chopin

Posted by in categories: chemistry, computing, information science, media & arts

Proteins are structured like folded chains. These chains are composed of small units of 20 possible amino acids, each labeled by a letter of the alphabet. A protein chain can be represented as a string of these alphabetic letters, very much like a string of music notes in alphabetical notation.

Protein chains can also fold into wavy and curved patterns with ups, downs, turns, and loops. Likewise, music consists of sound waves of higher and lower pitches, with changing tempos and repeating motifs.

Continue reading “The Music of Proteins Is Made Audible Through a Computer Program That Learns From Chopin” »

Oct 3, 2021

There’s a Giant Hole in the Middle of This 226-Foot Superyacht Concept —and That’s the Point

Posted by in category: space

Lazzarini.

The standout feature is, of course, the arc, or “hole deck” as Lazzarini calls it, which can be customized to each seafarer’s needs. Accessible via a door at the vessel’s bow, the sprawling space is ideal for lounging and is fitted with steps down to the ocean for requisite dips.

Shape is crowned by a glass-bottom infinity pool situated on the upper deck. It allows the swimmers above to look down on those below (or vice versa). Here, you’ll also find a helipad to facilitate the comings and goings of those onboard. At the stern, meanwhile, there is a waterside beach club with a diving platform, plus a garage for toys.

Oct 3, 2021

Test-tube lion cubs spark hope endangered species could be saved

Posted by in category: existential risks

Circa 2018


The birth of the world’s first “test-tube” lion cubs have sparked hope that the some of the world’s most endangered big cat species could be saved from extinction.

The male and female lion cubs were born in South Africa last week and mark the first time a successful pregnancy has been achieved through artificial insemination.

Continue reading “Test-tube lion cubs spark hope endangered species could be saved” »

Oct 3, 2021

Kuppies, Cat-Dogs, And Other Pet Hybrids That Are Too Good to Be True

Posted by in category: futurism

How much is that pet imposter in the window?

Oct 3, 2021

Phantom energy and dark gravity: Explaining the dark side of the universe

Posted by in categories: cosmology, particle physics

“While there have been published doubts raised about the accuracy of some of this CMB data, taken at face value it appears we may not have the right understanding, and it changes how big the Hubble constant should be today,” Riess said at the time.

“This surprising finding may be an important clue to understanding those mysterious parts of the universe that make up 95% of everything and don’t emit light, such as dark energy, dark matter and dark radiation.” Given its breadth and scope, astronomers around the world have taken the findings of Riess and his colleagues very seriously. After all, in 2011 Riess had shared the Nobel Prize in Physics for the initial discovery that the universe wasn’t just expanding, but that the rate at which it was doing so was also increasing.

Erik Verlinde of the University of Amsterdam has spent much of his time since 2010 attempting to develop a totally new theory of gravity, one that explains such observations without the need to invoke the likes of dark matter and dark energy. This resulted in his theory of emergent gravity, so-called because gravity is not a fundamental force after all, but an emergent phenomenon, similar to temperature emerging from the movement of particles.

Oct 3, 2021

Mercury mission flies

Posted by in categories: particle physics, space

BepiColombo will fly by the planet’s night side, so images during the closest approach wouldn’t be able to show much detail.

The mission team anticipates the images will show large impact craters that are scattered across Mercury’s surface, much like our moon. The researchers can use the images to map Mercury’s surface and learn more about the planet’s composition.

Some of the instruments on both orbiters will be turned on during the flyby so they can get a first whiff of Mercury’s magnetic field, plasma and particles.