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Jul 22, 2024
Life-Detection Potential on Europa and Enceladus: Amino Acid Insights
Posted by Laurence Tognetti, Labroots Inc. in categories: futurism, space
Based on our experiments, the ‘safe’ sampling depth for amino acids on Europa is almost 8 inches (around 20 centimeters) at high latitudes of the trailing hemisphere (hemisphere opposite to the direction of Europa’s motion around Jupiter) in the area where the surface hasn’t been disturbed much by…
How deep will future landers to Jupiter’s moon, Europa, and Saturn’s moon, Enceladus have to dig to find organic molecules aka the building blocks of life? This is what a recent study published in Astrobiology hopes to address as an international team of researchers investigated whether near-surface organic molecules on Europa and Enceladus could survive the intense solar and cosmic radiation since neither moon has a magnetic field like the Earth to shield it. This study holds the potential to help scientists better understand the conditions for finding life beyond Earth and the methods for finding that life, as well.
Image of Jupiter’s moon, Europa, obtained by NASA’s Juno spacecraft in September 2022. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS Image processing: Kevin M. Gill CC BY 3.0)
Continue reading “Life-Detection Potential on Europa and Enceladus: Amino Acid Insights” »
Jul 22, 2024
Startup Fights Superbugs, Antibiotic Resistance With Rapid Testing
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: biotech/medical
To tackle this issue, Israeli medical technology startup NanoSynex has developed a rapid personalized diagnostic test, which will enable doctors to prescribe the correct antibiotics at the moment they are needed most.
“There is a clear issue of misuse and overuse of antibiotics, and one of the ways to address this crisis, other than developing new antibiotics, is to better use existing antibiotics, by boosting the development of rapid and reliable diagnostic solutions, which is what we are doing at NanoSynex,” Diane Abensur, CEO and co-founder of NanoSynex, tells NoCamels.
NanoSynex offers laboratories better and faster solutions to determine the best treatment plan by providing rapid and accurate results for Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (AST), tests that are used to determine which specific antibiotics a particular bacteria or fungus is sensitive to.
Jul 22, 2024
See the moon meet Saturn, watch for shooting stars and find the Northern Crown this week
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
Discover your night sky this week, July 22–28, 2024, using just your naked eyes, no equipment necessary.
Jul 22, 2024
10 times as big as Starship! 8 THOUSAND times as fast!! Enzmann’s Pulse Nuclear Starship!
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in category: space travel
My latest video about the work of Dr. Robert Enzmann. The Pulse Starship is the ultimate generation ship, capable of carrying thousands of colonists at thousands of kilometers per second!
Check it out!
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Jul 22, 2024
Hundreds of US flights are canceled for the 4th straight day. Here’s the latest on the global tech outage
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: transportation
Hundreds of US flights were canceled Monday, as carriers, particularly Delta Air Lines, work to recover four days after a global tech outage caused massive delays and left travelers stranded at airports around the nation.
Delta is facing mounting pressure to get passengers back in the air, as it continues to rack up the majority of canceled US flights. US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has expressed frustration with the pace of Delta’s recovery and its CEO has apologized to affected travelers.
More than 900 flights into, within or out of the United States were canceled by midday Monday, and 3,100 flights were delayed, according to flight tracking site FlightAware. Delta passengers have been slammed by more than 4,500 cancellations since Friday, including 748 on Monday, by far the most of any airline.
Jul 22, 2024
34-Million-Year-Old Snake Discovered in Wyoming Changes Our Understanding of Evolution
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: evolution
A newly discovered fossil snake species in Wyoming is transforming our understanding of snake evolution. Unearthed from a burrow where four well-preserved specimens were found intertwined, this species, named Hibernophis breithaupti, lived in North America 34 million years ago. This discovery provides valuable insights into the origins and diversification of boas and pythons.
Hibernophis breithaupti has unique anatomical features, in part because the specimens are articulated—meaning they were found all in one piece with the bones still arranged in the proper order—which is unusual for fossil snakes. Researchers believe it may be an early member of Booidea, a group that includes modern boas and pythons. Modern boas are widespread in the Americas, but their early evolution is not well understood. These new and very complete fossils add important new information, in particular, on the evolution of small, burrowing boas known as rubber boas.
Jul 22, 2024
Flexible all-cellulose films combine structural color and strength for sustainable electronics
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: entertainment, sustainability
Researchers develop flexible, colorful films made entirely from cellulose, combining the optical properties of nanocrystals with the strength of nanofibers for sustainable electronics.
Jul 22, 2024
The Vision of Autonomic Computing: Can LLMs Make It a Reality?
Posted by Cecile G. Tamura in category: computing
Zhiyang Zhang, Fangkai Yang, Xiaoting Qin, Jue Zhang, Qingwei Lin, Gong Cheng, Dongmei Zhang, Saravan Rajmohan, Qi Zhang Nanjing University & Microsoft 2024 https://huggingface.co/papers/2407.
- the vision of autonomic computing…
Join the discussion on this paper page.
Jul 22, 2024
First of its kind Detection made in Striking New Webb Image
Posted by Natalie Chan in category: space
For the first time, a phenomenon astronomers have long hoped to directly image has been captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam). In this stunning image of the Serpens Nebula, the discovery lies in the northern area (seen at the upper left) of this young, nearby star-forming region.
Astronomers found an intriguing group of protostellar outflows, formed when jets of gas spewing from newborn stars collide with nearby gas and dust at high speeds. Typically these objects have varied orientations within one region. Here, however, they are slanted in the same direction, to the same degree, like sleet pouring down during a storm.
The discovery of these aligned objects, made possible due to Webb’s exquisite spatial resolution and sensitivity in near-infrared wavelengths, is providing information into the fundamentals of how stars are born.