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Feb 4, 2020

Breakthrough creates tough material able to stretch, heal and defend itself

Posted by in categories: biological, food

O.o.


While eating takeout one day, University of Chicago scientists Bozhi Tian and Yin Fang started thinking about the noodles—specifically, their elasticity. A specialty of Xi’an, Tian’s hometown in China, is wheat noodles stretched by hand until they become chewy—strong and elastic. Why, the two materials scientists wondered, didn’t they get thin and weak instead?

They started experimenting, ordering pounds and pounds of noodles from the restaurant. “They got very suspicious,” Fang said. “I think they thought we wanted to steal their secrets to open a rival restaurant.”

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Feb 4, 2020

Researchers Link Autism To A System That Insulates Brain Wiring

Posted by in categories: health, neuroscience

Study Links Autism To ‘Insulation’ That Coats Brain Cells And Speeds Signals : Shots — Health News Brains affected by autism appear to share a problem with cells that make myelin, the insulating coating surrounding nerve fibers that controls the speed at which the fibers convey electrical signals.

Feb 4, 2020

Could ‘young’ blood stop us getting old?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

US biotech companies are working towards plasma therapies to tackle age-related diseases in humans.

Feb 4, 2020

Wright Electric To Develop 1.5 MW Motor For 186-Seat Wright 1

Posted by in category: transportation

It’s hard to imagine today, but Wright Electric is trying to build an electric aircraft for 186 passengers.


Wright Electric announced the start of the electric propulsion development program for the 186-seat electric aircraft — Wright 1.

Feb 4, 2020

A new ‘Einstein’ equation suggests wormholes hold the key to quantum gravity

Posted by in categories: cosmology, information science, quantum physics

A new Einsteinian equation, ER=EPR, may be the clue physicists need to merge quantum mechanics with general relativity.

Feb 4, 2020

Quantum weirdness could allow a person-sized wormhole to last forever

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

We were unsure if wormholes could exist long enough to allow a person through. Now calculations indicate they are extremely rare, but could last the age of the universe.

Feb 4, 2020

Curl-free magnetic fields for stellarator optimization

Posted by in category: physics

O.o.


This paper describes a new and efficient method of defining an annular region of a curl-free magnetic field with specific physics and coil properties that can be used in stellarator design. Three statements define the importance:

Codes can follow an optimized curl-free initial state to a final full-pressure equilibrium. The large size of the optimization space of stellarators.

Approximately fifty externally-produced distributions of magnetic field, makes success in finding a global optimum largely determined by the starting point.

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Feb 4, 2020

The Navy Is Arming Nuclear Subs With Lasers. No One Knows Why

Posted by in category: military

O.o.


Laser weapons can strike at the speed of light, and they’re quickly deploying to every possible fighting domain, whether on land, in the air, and at sea. But what about under the sea?

Open-source budget documents, the earliest of which date back to 2011, show the Navy’s plans to arm Virginia-class nuclear subs with high-energy laser weapons. It’s a strange idea seeing as laser weapons definitely do not work underwater. Submarines are also quiet recluses by design, rarely popping their heads above water.

Feb 4, 2020

Electrical ‘storms’ and ’flash floods’ drown the brain after a stroke

Posted by in category: neuroscience

Strokes cause brain cells to short-circuit and trigger a dangerous flood of fluid in the tissue.

Feb 4, 2020

Identification of cancer driver genes based on nucleotide context

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Cancer genomes contain large numbers of somatic mutations but few of these mutations drive tumor development. Current approaches either identify driver genes on the basis of mutational recurrence or approximate the functional consequences of nonsynonymous mutations by using bioinformatic scores. Passenger mutations are enriched in characteristic nucleotide contexts, whereas driver mutations occur in functional positions, which are not necessarily surrounded by a particular nucleotide context. We observed that mutations in contexts that deviate from the characteristic contexts around passenger mutations provide a signal in favor of driver genes. We therefore developed a method that combines this feature with the signals traditionally used for driver-gene identification. We applied our method to whole-exome sequencing data from 11,873 tumor–normal pairs and identified 460 driver genes that clustered into 21 cancer-related pathways. Our study provides a resource of driver genes across 28 tumor types with additional driver genes identified according to mutations in unusual nucleotide contexts.