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May 29, 2024

Mystery of ‘slow’ solar wind unveiled by Solar Orbiter mission

Posted by in category: space

Described as “the most complex scientific laboratory ever to have been sent to the sun,” there are ten different scientific instruments onboard Solar Orbiter—some in situ to collect and analyze samples of the solar wind as it passes the spacecraft, and other remote sensing instruments designed to capture high quality images of activity at the sun’s surface.

By combining photographic and instrumental data, scientists have for the first time been able to identify more clearly where the slow solar wind originates. This has helped them to establish how it is able to leave the sun and begin its journey into the heliosphere—the giant bubble around the sun and its planets which protect our solar system from interstellar radiation.

Dr. Steph Yardley of Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, led the research and explains, The variability of solar wind streams measured in situ at a spacecraft close to the sun provide us with a lot of information on their sources, and although past studies have traced the origins of the solar wind, this was done much closer to Earth, by which time this variability is lost.

May 29, 2024

Physicists Puzzle Over Emergence of Strange Electron Aggregates

Posted by in categories: materials, particle physics

In the last year, two independent groups have observed electrons behaving like quasiparticles with fractional amounts of charge, like –²⁄₃ and –³⁄₅, without the influence of a magnetic field.


In the 127 years since the electron was discovered, it has undergone more scrutiny than perhaps any other particle. As a result, its properties are not just well known, but rote, textbook material: Electrons have a smidgen of mass and negative electric charge. In a conductor, they swim relatively unimpeded as a current; in an insulator, they barely move.

Over time, caveats have cropped up. Under an intense magnetic field, for example, electrons can lose their individual identities and form “quasiparticles”: collective entities, like the shape formed by a school of fish. But even these collective states have been well cataloged.

Continue reading “Physicists Puzzle Over Emergence of Strange Electron Aggregates” »

May 29, 2024

Priya Basu — Executive Head, The Pandemic Fund — Strengthening Prevention, Preparedness And Response

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Strengthening global pandemic prevention, preparedness and response — priya basu — executive head, the pandemic fund secretariat, the world bank.

May 29, 2024

Debates: How to Defeat Aging — $10K Prize! Aubrey de Grey VS Peter Fedichev

Posted by in category: life extension

We are excited to announce a high-stakes debate on one of humanity’s oldest enigmas: aging. This event is not just a discussion, but a contest with a grand prize of 10,000 USDT for the winner. The debate aims to tackle the various theories and methodologies related to aging and seeks to uncover actionable insights through rigorous scientific discourse.

More info 👉 https://openlongevity.org/debates.

Continue reading “Debates: How to Defeat Aging — $10K Prize! Aubrey de Grey VS Peter Fedichev” »

May 29, 2024

Doctors Intrigued by Mutation That Protects People From Aging

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

People with a rare mutation that causes Laron syndrome, a form of dwarfism, live healthier lives and could be the key to anti-aging drugs.

May 29, 2024

AI firms mustn’t govern themselves, say ex-members of OpenAI’s board

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

For humanity’s sake, regulation is needed to tame market forces, argue Helen Toner and Tasha McCauley.

May 29, 2024

Lifespan Expanded: The Scientific Quest For A Fountain Of Youth

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, life extension

#LongevityWe’re born, we grow old, we die. It’s a rhythm long considered inevitable. But is it? Or is aging merely a disease awaiting…

May 29, 2024

2BP: 2-Stage Backpropagation

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

2BP

2-Stage Backpropagation.

As Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) grow in size and complexity, they often exceed the memory capacity of a single accelerator, necessitating the sharding of model parameters across multiple accelerators.

Continue reading “2BP: 2-Stage Backpropagation” »

May 29, 2024

You can watch astronauts at the International Space Station receive 3 tons of supplies: Here’s how

Posted by in categories: energy, food, space

Space lovers have an opportunity to watch two unique occurrences at the International Space Station this week, but you will have to stay up pretty late — or wake up very early — to see them live.

According to NASA, the cargo spacecraft carrying three tons of food, fuel and supplies to the ISS is for the Expedition 71 crew.

The unpiloted spacecraft – called Progress 88 – is scheduled to launch on a Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Thursday at 2:43 p.m. local time.

May 29, 2024

Researchers uncover strange symptom that could be first sign of Alzheimer’s

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

New symptoms such as failing to identify more than one object at a time and a “space perception deficit” could be the first signs of Alzheimer’s disease, a new study has found.

Posterior cortical atrophy (PCA), is a diagnosis for those who struggle with judging distances, distinguishing between moving and stationary objects and completing tasks like writing and it overwhelmingly predicts Alzheimer’s.

In the latest study from researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, some 94 per cent patients with PCA had Alzheimer’s pathology. Most patients with PCA have normal cognition early on, but by the time of their first diagnostic visit, an average 3.8 years after symptom onset, mild or moderate dementia was apparent with deficits identified in memory, executive function, behavior, and speech and language , according to the researchers’ findings.

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