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May 1, 2021

Surprise in the Deep Sea: Researchers Discover Unexpected Paths on the Ocean Floor

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Sponges: They are considered to be one of the most primitive forms of animal life, because they have neither locomotion organs nor a nervous system. A team around deep-sea scientist Antje Boetius has now discovered that sponges leave trails on the sea floor in the Arctic deep sea. They conclude that the animals might move actively — even if only a few centimeters per year. They are now publishing these unique findings in the journal Current Biology.

The surprise was great when researchers looked at high-resolution images of the sea floor of the Arctic deep sea in detail: Path-like tracks across the sediments ended where sponges were located. These trails were observed to run in all directions, including uphill. “We conclude from this that the sponges might actively move across the sea floor and leave these traces as a result of their movement,” reports Dr Teresa Morganti, sponge expert from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen. This is particularly exciting because science had previously assumed that most sponges are attached to the seafloor or are passively moved by ocean currents and, usually down slopes.

May 1, 2021

Watch SpaceX Fly 4 Astronauts for Late Night Splash Down

Posted by in category: space travel

Crew-1, which launched to the space station in November, will head home in the capsule called Resilience.

May 1, 2021

Pissing Match: Is the World Ready for the Waterless Urinal?

Posted by in categories: business, electronics

Circa 2010


In a laboratory 10 miles east of downtown Los Angeles, a mechanical penis sputters to life. A technician starts a timer as a stream of water erupts from the apparatus’s brass tip, arcing into a urinal mounted exactly 12 inches away. James Krug smiles. His latest back-splatter experiment is under way.

Krug is an unusual entrepreneur. Twenty years ago, he was a rising star in the film and television business. He served as a vice president of the Disney Channel in the 1980s and ran a distribution company with members of the Disney family in the ’90s. But 11 years ago, Krug became convinced that the world did not need another TV show. What it needed was a better urinal.

May 1, 2021

Coronavirus: New variants are causing growing concern in Africa

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A lack of specialised genome sequencing is making it difficult to track new mutations in Africa.

May 1, 2021

Juan Williams — Emmy Award Winning Television Commentator, Radio Personality, Newspaper Columnist

Posted by in category: life extension

Emmy award winning television commentator, radio personality, and newspaper columnist, juan williams, talking about inter-generational dynamics, ageism, and aging in america.


Progress, Potential, And Possibilities has the honor of being joined today by Emmy Award winning Television Commentator, Radio Personality, and Newspaper Columnist, Mr. Juan Williams.

Continue reading “Juan Williams — Emmy Award Winning Television Commentator, Radio Personality, Newspaper Columnist” »

May 1, 2021

Once a Covid hotspot, Italian village now intrigues researchers with ‘super-immune’ cases

Posted by in category: futurism

Very close to Vicenza.


Covid “super-immune” people seem to be in a high concentration in Vo’. Researchers want to know why.

May 1, 2021

Stars That Race through Space at Nearly the Speed of Light

Posted by in category: cosmology

Some are blasted out of galaxies by interactions with black holes; others, which orbit supermassive black holes, can smash together in titanic explosions.

May 1, 2021

New Brain-Like Computing Device With Electrochemical “Synaptic Transistors” Simulates Human Learning

Posted by in categories: chemistry, computing, food, neuroscience

Researchers have developed a brain-like computing device that is capable of learning by association.

Similar to how famed physiologist Ivan Pavlov conditioned dogs to associate a bell with food, researchers at Northwestern University and the University of Hong Kong successfully conditioned their circuit to associate light with pressure.

The research will be published today (April 30, 2021) in the journal Nature Communications.

May 1, 2021

Images: 10 incredible volcanoes in our solar system

Posted by in category: space

These violent openings are windows into the inner workings and origins of our neighboring planets and their moons.

May 1, 2021

Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Helps Unravel the Physics Underlying Quantum Systems

Posted by in categories: information science, mathematics, particle physics, quantum physics, robotics/AI

Protocol to reverse engineer Hamiltonian models advances automation of quantum devices.

Scientists from the University of Bristol ’s Quantum Engineering Technology Labs (QETLabs) have developed an algorithm that provides valuable insights into the physics underlying quantum systems — paving the way for significant advances in quantum computation and sensing, and potentially turning a new page in scientific investigation.

In physics, systems of particles and their evolution are described by mathematical models, requiring the successful interplay of theoretical arguments and experimental verification. Even more complex is the description of systems of particles interacting with each other at the quantum mechanical level, which is often done using a Hamiltonian model. The process of formulating Hamiltonian models from observations is made even harder by the nature of quantum states, which collapse when attempts are made to inspect them.