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Dec 4, 2020

Cockroaches Are Rapidly Evolving To Become ‘Almost Impossible’ To Kill

Posted by in category: chemistry

Don’t worry, they aren’t immune to a good slipper…for now.


The rise of the superbug cockroach is upon us. A new study has found that German cockroaches (Blattella germanica) are rapidly evolving to become resistant to many widely used bug sprays and insecticides, as well as chemicals they’ve never been directly exposed to, making them near-impossible to eliminate and one step closer to taking over the world.

Remarkably, the study published in Scientific Reports revealed these scuttling pests could even develop resistance within a single generation. Others also developed cross-resistance, meaning they gained a tolerance to a usually toxic substance just through contact with a similar type of insecticide.

Continue reading “Cockroaches Are Rapidly Evolving To Become ‘Almost Impossible’ To Kill” »

Dec 4, 2020

China’s Chang’e-5 Moon mission returns colour pictures

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space

The robotic Chang’e-5 probe starts work to gather lunar samples it can send to Earth for study.

Dec 4, 2020

China’s Chang’e 5 probe lifts off from moon carrying lunar samples

Posted by in category: space

China has launched a small spacecraft from the surface of the moon in the critical next step in the ambitious Chang’e 5 mission to bring lunar samples to Earth.

Dec 4, 2020

Episode 27 — Why Mars Went Wrong

Posted by in category: space

This is the episode for all those with questions about what we know about Mars. Specifically, how Mars went from being potentially habitable to the desert we see today. Guest Bruce Jakosky, the Principal Investigator for NASA’s MAVEN Mars orbiter explains it all.


NASA’s MAVEN orbiter has arguably done more to document how and why Mars lost its atmosphere and much of its water than any spacecraft ever sent to the red planet. The mission’s principal investigator, planetary scientist Bruce Jakosky is this week’s featured guest and we discuss the current paradigm on why Mars went so horribly wrong. Jakosky offers a candid and inside look at how such missions work and what we can expect from Mars science in the next few years.

Dec 4, 2020

Cool laser writes data in 20 trillionths of a second

Posted by in category: computing

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European researchers have unveiled a memory storage device that writes data 1,000 times faster than today’s hard drives while producing little heat.

Andrzej Stupakiewicz from the University of Bialystok in Poland and colleagues used precisely tuned laser pulses to store information on garnet crystal at blistering speeds with very little heat.

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Dec 3, 2020

Magnetism Does the Twist: Skyrmions 10,000 Times Thinner Than a Human Hair Could Advance High-Density Data Storage

Posted by in categories: climatology, computing, particle physics, quantum physics

Scientists discovered a strategy for layering dissimilar crystals with atomic precision to control the size of resulting magnetic quasi-particles called skyrmions. This approach could advance high-density data storage and quantum magnets for quantum information science.

In typical ferromagnets, magnetic spins align up or down. Yet in skyrmions, they twist and swirl, forming unique shapes like petite porcupines or tiny tornadoes.

The tiny intertwined magnetic structures could innovate high-density data storage, for which size does matter and must be small. The Oak Ridge National Laboratory-led project produced skyrmions as small as 10 nanometers – 10,000 times thinner than a human hair.

Dec 3, 2020

Big cat ‘spotted’ prowling UK town centre three times in the last week

Posted by in category: futurism

The terrifying beast has purportedly been seen in Halifax, West Yorkshire, three times since Wednesday, November 25, with residents left mystified as to what the animal could be dailystar.

Dec 3, 2020

This Solar-Powered Luxury RV Has A Balcony & Can Charge Your Tesla!

Posted by in categories: sustainability, transportation

RV life has never appealed a great deal to me. It has had a slight appeal, but it always looked a bit too compromising for my tastes. Until I discovered the Living Vehicle today.

Granted, there are still some benefits to a more fixed living situation, and an important thing to note is the Living Vehicle is certainly not cheap. It starts at $229,995 and various options will add thousands more (each). But the thing is wicked, offers the core luxuries of life that I feel I need, and allows you to travel all over the place and have different amazing views out your window and your front door as you wish — the kind of views, I presume, that can cost millions of dollars on their own.

Dec 3, 2020

How to make Tesla Tower at home

Posted by in categories: energy, materials

Transmit Electricity wirelessly and surprise everyone. Make your own Tesla tower to transmit power wireless. The tower uses a tesla coil that is based on the concept of Electromagnetic force and resonance to transmit energy.
However, it doesn’t actually transmit electricity, all it does is excite the electrons on the walls of fluorescent or neon lights to make them glow.

For principle of operation and material links visit:
https://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-Make-a-Mini-Tesla-Tower/

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Dec 3, 2020

Moon May Hold Billions of Tons of Subterranean Ice at Its Poles

Posted by in category: space

New research indicates that if even a moderate amount of the water delivered by asteroids to the Moon was sequestered, the lunar poles would contain gigaton deposits (1 billion metric tons) of ice in sheltered craters and beneath its surface.

By modeling over 4 billion years of the Moon’s impact history, researchers were able to track the origin and potential quantity of ice that might be obscured from view beneath the lunar surface.

“We looked at the entire time history of ice deposition on the Moon,” said Kevin Cannon, a planetary scientist at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden and lead author of the new study in the AGU journal Geophysical Research Letters.