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Mar 2, 2021

How English became the language of physics

Posted by in category: physics

Today, more than 90% of the indexed articles in the natural sciences are published in English. That wasn’t always the case.

Mar 2, 2021

This complex microbial warfare is taking place in a single drop of water

Posted by in category: military

Hungry fungus recruits bacteria and their viruses to snag prey.

Mar 2, 2021

Toward the development of drugs for aging-related diseases

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry, life extension

In the search for ways to effectively combat age-related human disease, the enzyme sirtuin 6 (Sirt6) has recently become a focus of biochemical research. A targeted activation of Sirt6 could prevent or mitigate such diseases, for example some types of cancer. In a paper for the journal Nature Chemical Biology, biochemists from the University of Bayreuth have now shown how the small molecule MDL-801 binds to the enzyme Sirt6 and influences its activity. These findings stand to aid the development of new drugs.

Mar 2, 2021

Researchers Linked Dead Locust’s Ear to Robot and It Works

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Tel Aviv University researchers linked a robot to a dead locust’s ear, enabling the bot to actually hear. Read it here.

Mar 2, 2021

Atomic nuclei in the quantum swing

Posted by in category: quantum physics

The coherent excitation of atomic nuclei enables applications in atomic clocks, nuclear batteries and in the verification of natural constants. A team led by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics succeeded in the experiment by controlling laser pulses extremely precisely.

Mar 2, 2021

New Johnson & Johnson Coronavirus Vaccine Created With Fetal Cells From Babies Killed in Abortion

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The Archdiocese of New Orleans warned Catholics that a newly-approved Johnson & Johnson vaccine for COVID-19 was developed with the “extensive use of abortion-derived cell lines.”

Mar 2, 2021

SpaceX is ready to launch more astronauts with Crew-2 next month

Posted by in category: space travel

SpaceX’s second fully-crewed astronaut flight, Crew-2, is prepared for launch, mission team members said today (March 1) during a news briefing.

Mar 2, 2021

4D bioengineering materials bend, curve like natural tissue

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical

Tissue engineering has long-depended on geometrically static scaffolds seeded with cells in the lab to create new tissues and even organs. The scaffolding material—usually a biodegradable polymer structure—is supplied with cells and the cells, if supplied with the right nutrients, then develop into tissue as the underlying scaffold biodegrades. But this model ignores the extraordinarily dynamic morphological processes that underlie the natural development of tissues. Now, researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago have developed new 4D hydrogels—3D materials that have the ability to change shape over time in response to stimuli—that can morph multiple times in a preprogrammed or on-demand manner in response to external trigger signals. In a new Advanced Science study, the UIC researchers, led by Eben Alsberg, show that these new materials may be used to help develop tissues that more closely resemble their natural counterparts, which are subject to forces that drive movement during their formation.

Mar 2, 2021

World’s First Supersonic Unmanned Combat Drone Reaches Speeds Of Over 1,500mph

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI, space travel

It can exceed the speed of sound, hitting an astonishing Mach 2.1! 😲🤯


A new combat drone has been created that can hit speeds of more than 1500mph.

The drone is much bigger than the ones you’ll have seen floating around your local parks, however, and looks more like a small spaceship.

Continue reading “World’s First Supersonic Unmanned Combat Drone Reaches Speeds Of Over 1,500mph” »

Mar 2, 2021

Interesting pattern in cross-sections observed in F + HD → HF + D reaction

Posted by in categories: chemistry, quantum physics

A team of researchers from the University of Science and Technology of China, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Southern University of Science and Technology, has discovered a thought-provoking pattern in cross-sections observed in an F + HD → HF + D reaction. In their paper published in the journal Science, the group describes their double-pronged approach to learning more about the role of relativistic spin-orbit interactions in chemical reactions. T. Peter Rakitzis, with the University of Crete, and IESL-FORTH, has published a Perspectives piece in the same journal issue outlining the difficulty of studying chemical reactions at the quantum level and the work done by the team in China.