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Feb 15, 2024

‘Beyond what’s possible’: New JWST observations unearth mysterious ancient galaxy

Posted by in category: cosmology

Our understanding of how galaxies form and the nature of dark matter could be completely upended after new observations of a stellar population bigger than the Milky Way from more than 11 billion years ago that should not exist.

A paper published today in Nature details findings using new data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The results find that a in the —observed 11.5 billion years ago (a cosmic redshift of 3.2)—has an extremely old population of stars formed much earlier—1.5 billion years earlier in time (a redshift of around 11). The observation upends current modeling, as not enough dark matter has built up in sufficient concentrations to seed their formation.

Swinburne University of Technology’s Distinguished Professor Karl Glazebrook led the study and the international team, who used the JWST for spectroscopic observations of this massive quiescent galaxy.

Feb 15, 2024

Generative AI could be society’s new equalizer. Here’s why

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

An expert highlights how generative #AI could distribute #productivity gains across multiple social sectors and act as a balance wheel for wider society.

Feb 15, 2024

OpenAI Hiring Detective to Find Who’s Leaking Its Precious Info

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, security

OpenAI is looking to hire an “insider risk investigator” to “fortify our organization against internal security threats.”

According to the company’s job listing, first spotted by MSPowerUser, the gumshoe is supposed to help the company safeguard its assets by “analyzing anomalous activities, promoting a secure culture, and interacting with various departments to mitigate risks.” Per the Wayback Machine, the job listing has been up since mid-January.

“You’ll play a crucial role in safeguarding OpenAI’s assets by analyzing anomalous activities, promoting a secure culture, and interacting with various departments to mitigate risks,” the listing reads. “Your expertise will be instrumental in protecting OpenAI against internal risks, thereby contributing to the broader societal benefits of artificial intelligence.”

Feb 15, 2024

Engineer designs molecules for our quantum future

Posted by in categories: engineering, quantum physics

Editor’s note: This story is part of Meet a UChicagoan, a regular series focusing on the people who make UChicago a distinct intellectual community. Read about the others here.

Wide is the spectrum of scientific inquiry, ranging from the philosophical— What is information?—to the banal — Where did I put that Allen wrench?

For University of Chicago graduate student Chloe Washabaugh, there is joy to be found in all of it. A Ph.D. student in quantum engineering at the Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, Washabaugh fashions molecules into tiny quantum information processors, designing them to sense, send or store data—whatever the need.

Feb 15, 2024

New Mechanism Reveals How Tumors Evade Immune Detection

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Scientists have dedicated their lives to finding a cure for cancer. America became a science hub for cancer research, particularly after President Richard Nixon declared the “war on cancer” in 1971. As a result, extensive research has been published on how cancer functions and different ways to target both solid and hematologic malignancies. Unfortunately, there is currently not a cure for cancer. Although some patients are treated and enter remission, tumors can reoccur. In addition, some tumor types are harder to treat than others. Although the science community is hopeful to effectively treat each type of cancer, more work is needed to discern why some tumors are harder to treat than others.

Many tumors evade the immune system through different mechanisms and mutations. Therapy-resistant cells may stay dormant for a period of time before proliferating, which results in cancer recurrence. Additionally, different surface markers prevent immune cell activation which target cancer. This allows the tumor to proliferate without an immune cell response. Many different immunotherapies being developed target these surface markers to activate T cells, which kill or lyse infections. The type of immunotherapy that refers to the blockade of cell-to-cell interactions is known as checkpoint inhibitors. Checkpoint proteins are surface markers that help the immune cell differentiate from self. More specifically, these cells provide a signal for immune cells to avoid lysing healthy cells and protect from autoimmunity. However, tumors use a selection of checkpoint proteins to avoid immune cell detection.

Feb 15, 2024

The key to fighting fungal infections may have been inside us all along

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Fungal infections have been slipping past their usual geographic boundaries and increasing in hospitals and other settings — and, as Scientific American’s Maryn McKenna has pointed out, we currently don’t have much recourse against them.

Fungal infections are incredibly hard to beat, even with modern medicine.

But MIT researchers studying the common yeast Candida albicans may have found a new effective antifungal candidate, and you’ve got some in you right now: mucus.

Feb 15, 2024

Beyond cute: What tardigrades can teach us about life and death

Posted by in category: electronics

Tardigrades are often considered the most endearing invertebrates, akin to the capybara of their realm, yet their significance surpasses mere charm.


This year, researchers from Harvard Medical School, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia, discovered that when the tardigrades are under stress, their bodies produce unstable free radicals of oxygen and an unpaired electron.

Continue reading “Beyond cute: What tardigrades can teach us about life and death” »

Feb 15, 2024

Chinese chipmaker tapes out 16-core DragonChain-powered CPU, 64-core coming — Loongson LS3C6000 server processor will rival Zen 3 CPUs

Posted by in category: computing

Loongson’s next-generation data center CPU is ready.

Feb 15, 2024

Tesla Made $1.79 Billion In 2023 Just From Selling EV Credits To Other Carmakers

Posted by in category: transportation

Saving the world’s automakers from fines made Tesla nearly $9 billion since 2009.

Feb 15, 2024

Google: Next-Gen Gemini 1.5 AI Model Can Handle ‘Vast Amounts’ of Data

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The next-generation AI model from Google excels at processing large amounts of information per one query, such as 30,000 lines of code or over 700,000 words of text.

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