Menu

Blog

Page 65

Oct 22, 2024

Scientists uncover how transcription drives motion within the genome

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

A team of scientists has discovered surprising connections among gene activity, genome packing, and genome-wide motions, revealing aspects of the genome’s organization that directly affect gene regulation and expression.

Oct 22, 2024

Effect of a giant meteorite impact on Paleoarchean surface environments and life

Posted by in categories: biological, chemistry

Large meteorite impacts must have strongly affected the habitability of the early Earth. Rocks of the Archean Eon record at least 16 major impact events, involving bolides larger than 10 km in diameter. These impacts probably had severe, albeit temporary, consequences for surface environments. However, their effect on early life is not well understood. Here, we analyze the sedimentology, petrography, and carbon isotope geochemistry of sedimentary rocks across the S2 impact event (37 to 58 km carbonaceous chondrite) forming part of the 3.26 Ga Fig Tree Group, South Africa, to evaluate its environmental effects and biological consequences.

Oct 22, 2024

The universe may end in a ‘Big Freeze,’ holographic model of the universe suggests

Posted by in category: cosmology

New research suggests holographic dark energy could stop the universe’s expansion.

Oct 22, 2024

Cancer study finds nuts could hold key to stopping spread of disease

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

New research has found that a mineral found in Brazil nuts could be the key to stopping the spread of triple negative breast cancer.

Triple negative breast cancer can be hard to treat but is often manageable through therapy and surgery, unless it spreads to other parts of the body when it can become inoperable.

The study, funded by Cancer Research UK, suggests that limiting the antioxidant effects of selenium, a popular ingredient of multivitamin supplements found in everyday foods such as nuts, meat, mushrooms and cereals, could be the secret to controlling this form of the disease.

Oct 22, 2024

Our Cosmic Neighborhood May be 10x Larger

Posted by in category: space

The Cosmicflows team has been studying the movements of 56,000 galaxies, revealing a potential shift in the scale of our galactic basin of attraction. A team of international researchers guided by astronomers at University of Hawai’i Institute for Astronomy is challenging our understanding of the universe with groundbreaking findings that suggest our cosmic neighborhood may be far larger than previously thought.

A decade ago, the team concluded that our galaxy, the Milky Way, resides within a massive basin of attraction called Laniākea, stretching 500 million light-years across.

However, new data suggests that this understanding may only scratch the surface.

Oct 22, 2024

‘Squeezing’ Increased Accuracy of Quantum Measurements

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, quantum physics

Tohoku University’s Dr. Le Bin Ho has explored how quantum squeezing can improve measurement precision in complex quantum systems, with potential applications in quantum sensing, imaging, and radar technologies. These findings may lead to advancements in areas like GPS accuracy and early disease detection through more sensitive biosensors.

Quantum squeezing is a concept in quantum physics where the uncertainty in one aspect of a system is reduced while the uncertainty in another related aspect is increased. Imagine squeezing a round balloon filled with air. In its normal state, the balloon is perfectly spherical. When you squeeze one side, it gets flattened and stretched out in the other direction. This represents what is happening in a squeezed quantum state: you are reducing the uncertainty (or noise) in one quantity, like position, but in doing so, you increase the uncertainty in another quantity, like momentum. However, the total uncertainty remains the same, since you are just redistributing it between the two. Even though the overall uncertainty remains the same, this ‘squeezing’ allows you to measure one of those variables with much greater precision than before.

This technique has already been used to improve the accuracy of measurements in situations where only one variable needs to be precisely measured, such as in improving the precision of atomic clocks. However, using squeezing in cases where multiple factors need to be measured simultaneously, such as an object’s position and momentum, is much more challenging.

Oct 22, 2024

Are telomeres really the key to living longer, youthful lives?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

As Canadians brace for “vitamin D winter”—months when the sun’s angle is too low to produce the vitamin in the skin—a McGill University study explains why vitamin D deficiency early in life is associated with a higher risk of autoimmune diseases.

During childhood, the thymus helps train to distinguish between the body’s own tissues and harmful invaders. A vitamin D deficiency at that stage of life causes the thymus to age more quickly, the researchers discovered.

The study is published in the journal Science Advances.

Oct 22, 2024

Going to concerts helps you live longer, according to research

Posted by in category: futurism

Oh, simple thing, where have you gone? I’m getting old, and I need something to rely on.

Keane.


A study says live gigs could increase well-being by 21 percent.

Continue reading “Going to concerts helps you live longer, according to research” »

Oct 22, 2024

Aging and longevity: Could a cheek swab test predict mortality risk?

Posted by in category: life extension

A simple cheek swab test called CheekAge may be able to predict a person’s increase in mortality risk, according to its developers.

Oct 22, 2024

A Route Toward the Island of Stability

Posted by in categories: chemistry, particle physics

Scientists have synthesized an isotope of the superheavy element livermorium using a novel fusion reaction. The result paves the way for the discovery of new chemical elements.

How and where in the Universe are the chemical elements created? How can we explain their relative abundance? What is the maximum number of protons and neutrons that the nuclear force can bind in a single nucleus? Nuclear physicists and chemists expect to find answers to such questions by creating and studying new elements. But as elements get more and more massive, they become harder and harder to synthesize. The heaviest elements discovered so far were created by bombarding high-atomic-number (high-Z) actinide targets with beams of calcium-48 (48 Ca). This isotope is particularly suited to such experiments because of its peculiar nuclear configuration, in which the number of neutrons and protons are both “magic numbers.” Yet this approach could not produce elements beyond oganesson (proton number, Z = 118).

Page 65 of 11,947First6263646566676869Last