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Feb 16, 2018

Researchers create first superatomic 2-D semiconductor

Posted by in categories: materials, particle physics

(Left) Superatomic structure and (right) exfoliated 15-nm-thick flakes of the material Re6Se8Cl2. Credit: Zhong et al. ©2018 American Chemical Society Atoms are the basic building blocks of all matter—at least, that is the conventional picture. In a new study, researchers have fabricated the first superatomic 2-D semiconductor, a material whose basic units aren’t atoms but superatoms—atomic clusters that exhibit some of the properties of one or more individual atoms. The researchers expect that the new material is just the first member of what will become a new family of 2-D semiconductors…

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Feb 16, 2018

New CRISPR-Cas9 tool edits both RNA and DNA precisely

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A tool that has already revolutionized disease research may soon get even better, thanks to an accidental discovery in the bacteria that cause many of the worst cases of meningitis.

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Feb 16, 2018

Chinese farmers are using AI to help rear the world’s biggest pig population

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

How do you keep track of 700 million pigs? AI can help.

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Feb 16, 2018

Authorities deactivate transit pass implanted in biohacker’s hand

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, cyborgs, law

Meow-Ludo Disco Gamma Meow-Meow couldn’t just toss away his New South Wales transit pass even after he found out that it got deactivated while he was on a trip to the USee, Meow-Meow (yes, that is his legal name) cut the chip out of the travel card, encased it in biocompatible plastic and had it implanted under the skin on his left hand. The biohacker now plans to file a lawsuit against New South Wales’ transport authorities, not just to fight the decision, but also to help create laws around body-hacking tech. In addition to the transit pass chip, Meow-Meow has two other implanted elect…

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Feb 16, 2018

First glimpse of how genes may cause mental health problems

Posted by in categories: genetics, health, neuroscience

Geneticists are starting to unpick what causes psychiatric conditions like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and even some autism-like developmental conditions.

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Feb 16, 2018

Scientists find nearly 100 new ‘exoplanets’ in hunt for life in space

Posted by in categories: alien life, innovation

Scientists have discovered nearly 100 new ‘exoplanets’ in the search for Earth-like planets that could support life.

It’s a major breakthrough that reveals new planets that range in size from smaller than Earth to celestial bodies even bigger than Jupiter.

The findings were made by a team of international colleagues from the University of Denmark, NASA, the University of Tokyo and others.

Continue reading “Scientists find nearly 100 new ‘exoplanets’ in hunt for life in space” »

Feb 16, 2018

How the private space industry could take over lower Earth orbit — and make money off it

Posted by in categories: economics, space

What will happen when the International Space Station ends?

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Feb 16, 2018

Amateur Astronauts Flock to The Starfighters as Space Travel Becomes Reality

Posted by in category: space

The Starfighters are lobbying to become the first certified astronaut training fleet endorsed by NASA.

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Feb 16, 2018

Hubble sees Neptune’s mysterious shrinking storm

Posted by in category: space

Three billion miles away on the farthest known major planet in our solar system, an ominous, dark storm — once big enough to stretch across the Atlantic Ocean from Boston to Portugal — is shrinking out of existence as seen in pictures of Neptune taken by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope.

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Feb 16, 2018

A Scientific Search For A Ghost (Particle)

Posted by in category: particle physics

Scientists put a lot of effort into uncovering the history of these tiny bits of matter, in the hopes that it will tell us something about the universe, says astrophysicist Marcelo Gleiser.

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