A startup makes your computer’s storage capacity seem bottomless by connecting it to the cloud.
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Jul 12, 2019
Elite Athletes Have Exercise-Enhancing Gut Bacteria
Posted by Steve Hill in category: health
A new study has discovered that the guts of elite athletes contain a particular type of bacteria that boosts exercise capacity. The bacteria are members of the genus Veillonella and are not present in the gut microbiomes of sedentary people.
The microbiome
The microbiome is an ever-changing ecosystem in the gut populated by a vast array of types of archaea, eukarya, viruses, and bacteria. Four microbial phyla, Firmicutes, Bacteroides, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria, make up 98% of the intestinal microbiome.
Jul 12, 2019
Chernobyl Nuclear Reactor That Devastated the Region Is Finally Sealed—33 Years After the Explosion
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: finance, nuclear energy
To finance the containment structure, the EBRD managed a fund with contributions from 45 countries, the European Union, and the bank’s own resources. Ukraine contributed 100 million euros (about $112 million).
Deputy project manager Victor Zalizetskyi, who has been part of construction and repairs at the Chernobyl plant since 1987, said he was “filled with pride” that he got to work on a job “that has such a big importance for all humankind.”
However, Zalizetskyi expressed concern in an interview last week that war-torn Ukraine might struggle to cover the maintenance costs for the reactor’s new enclosure. He noted that costly and complicated work such as dismantling unstable sections of the power plant still needs to be done.
Jul 12, 2019
Strange warping geometry helps to push scientific boundaries
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: computing, mathematics, particle physics, space, transportation
Atomic interactions in everyday solids and liquids are so complex that some of these materials’ properties continue to elude physicists’ understanding. Solving the problems mathematically is beyond the capabilities of modern computers, so scientists at Princeton University have turned to an unusual branch of geometry instead.
Researchers led by Andrew Houck, a professor of electrical engineering, have built an electronic array on a microchip that simulates particle interactions in a hyperbolic plane, a geometric surface in which space curves away from itself at every point. A hyperbolic plane is difficult to envision—the artist M.C. Escher used hyperbolic geometry in many of his mind-bending pieces—but is perfect for answering questions about particle interactions and other challenging mathematical questions.
The research team used superconducting circuits to create a lattice that functions as a hyperbolic space. When the researchers introduce photons into the lattice, they can answer a wide range of difficult questions by observing the photons’ interactions in simulated hyperbolic space.
Jul 12, 2019
Statin use over 65 years of age and all-cause mortality: A 10-year follow-up of 19,518 people
Posted by Jacob Anderson in categories: biotech/medical, sex
Those who had adhered to statin treatment vs those who had not were found to have 34% lower all-cause mortality rates. Fewer atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease events were reported in relation to adherence to statins. Irrespective of age and sex, reduced mortality and cardiovascular morbidity may be seen in older adults in relation to adherence to statins.
Internal Medicine Article: Statin use over 65 years of age and all-cause mortality: A 10-year follow-up of 19,518 people.
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Jul 12, 2019
Yale researchers revive cells in dead pig brains
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
YaleNew
In a stunning scientific breakthrough, Yale School of Medicine researchers restored brain activity in pigs that had died hours before. The finding could revolutionize the neuroscience field and how scientists conceive the boundaries between life and death.
By circulating a cocktail of cell-rejuvenating compounds throughout the pigs’ brains, the researchers prevented tissue decomposition and restored some cell function. If replicated, their technique could be used as a model for drug testing and has implications for how scientists understand brain plasticity after traumatic events such as strokes.
Jul 12, 2019
EU to run war games to prepare for Russian and Chinese cyber-attacks
Posted by Derick Lee in category: cybercrime/malcode
Last week the EU’s leaders committed at a summit in Brussels to “a coordinated response to hybrid and cyber-threats” and asked the European commission and member states to “work on measures to enhance the resilience and improve the security culture” of the bloc.
Ministers to be put in fictional scenarios after series of hacking incidents.
Jul 12, 2019
First evidence of chronic pain in insects points to a root cause in humans
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: biotech/medical
The drugs we’ve developed to help us deal with chronic pain largely focus on suppressing its symptoms, rather than eliminating its underlying causes. By studying the way pain works in injured fruit flies, scientists have for the first time uncovered evidence that its effects can be long-lasting, something they say opens up new opportunities for more effective treatments in humans.
Jul 12, 2019
Inside Starshot, the audacious plan to shoot tiny ships to Alpha Centauri
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in category: space travel
Starshot wants to build the world’s most powerful laser and aim it at the closest star. What could go wrong?