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Jan 27, 2020

DNA sleuths read the coronavirus genome, tracing its origins

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health

Analyses of the viral genome are already providing clues to the origins of the outbreak and even possible ways to treat the infection, a need that is becoming more urgent by the day: Early on Saturday in China, health officials reported 15 new fatalities in a single day, bringing the death toll to 41. There are now nearly 1,100 confirmed cases there.

Reading the genome (which is made of RNA, not DNA) also allows researchers to monitor how 2019-nCoV is changing and provides a roadmap for developing a diagnostic test and a vaccine.

“The genetics can tell us the true timing of the first cases” and whether they occurred earlier than officials realized, said molecular biologist Kristian Andersen of Scripps Research, an expert on viral genomes. “It can also tell us how the outbreak started — from a single event of a virus jumping from an infected animal to a person or from a lot of animals being infected. And the genetics can tell us what’s sustaining the outbreak — new introductions from animals or human-to-human transmission.”

Jan 27, 2020

How smart were our ancestors? Turns out the answer isn’t in brain size, but blood flow

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

To understand how much thinking a brain can do, look at how much blood — and therefore how much energy — it uses.

Jan 27, 2020

Coronavirus — A Matter of Life and Death?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, food

The coronavirus currently sweeping across China has all these characteristics. It can pass directly from one human to another. It takes up to 14 days to fully incubate. And, according to Chinese authorities, long before an individual becomes symptomatic, he or she is contagious.

There are also other facts concerning this virus that should give us pause. The only bio lab in China at which work can be done on viruses of this type is located just outside the city of Wuhan – the epicenter of the growing epidemic. The coronavirus is also known to be of interest to Chinese bio-researchers, and, in fact, last year Chinese intelligence personnel were implicated in the theft of coronavirus from a Canadian lab and the transport of the organism to China.

None of that is conclusive. None of that tells us definitively that the virus is manmade or even that humans had any part in its release. The leading theory is that the virus entered the human population from a market in Wuhan where animals known to carry the coronavirus are sold as food. That remains, as of this writing, the most likely explanation for what is now happening.

Jan 27, 2020

USAF’s XQ-58A Valkyrie UAV completes fourth flight test

Posted by in categories: military, robotics/AI

The US Air Force’s (USAF) XQ-58A Valkyrie low-cost unmanned air vehicle (UAV) demonstrator has completed its fourth flight at Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona.

The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) has partnered with Kratos Defense & Security Solutions to develop the demonstrator.

It is part of the research laboratory’s Low Cost Attritable Aircraft Technology portfolio.

Jan 27, 2020

New coronavirus may be much more contagious than initially thought

Posted by in category: futurism

The new coronavirus is spreading faster than SARS — and it may be because it can be passed on before a person shows any sign of symptoms.

Jan 27, 2020

We’re All Going to Live in Mushroom Houses on Mars

Posted by in categories: space, transportation

NASA is sharing information about its myco-architecture program, in which experimental fungus-based building technologies could be the feasible future of Mars habitats. “Science fiction often imagines our future on Mars and other planets as run by machines, with metallic cities and flying cars rising above dunes of red sand,” NASA says. “But the reality may be even stranger.”

The myco-architecture (myco is the prefix meaning “fungus”) NASA is excited about isn’t only a new way to make furniture, although it can do that, the agency says. Mushroom House—not its real name—is an integrated habitat with layers. The tough, complex fibers made by fungal mycelia are building blocks of furniture, interior walls, and the innermost layer of the outer shell.

Jan 27, 2020

NASA’s Johnson Space Center Photo

Posted by in category: space travel

We pause to honor these three men, lost 53 years ago today, who paved the way for future giant leaps in space exploration.

Gus grissom, ed white and roger chaffee: apollo 1.

Jan 27, 2020

Glial Brain Cells, Long in Neurons’ Shadow, Reveal Hidden Powers

Posted by in category: neuroscience

The glial cells of the nervous system have been eclipsed in importance by neurons for decades. But glia are turning out to be central to many neurological functions, including pain perception.

Jan 27, 2020

These DARPA-funded bricks can self-repair—and replicate

Posted by in category: materials

While not as strong as concrete, the bricks could reduce the CO2 footprint of a building, self-heal, and even reproduce.

[Photo: University of Colorado Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science].

Jan 27, 2020

Building High-Rises Out of Wood Can Help Save the Planet

Posted by in category: materials

Concrete and steel come with massive emissions. So let’s ditch them and build towers out of wood. Yes, wood.