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Jan 6, 2025

Scientists Discover What Could be the Key to Slowing Down Aging

Posted by in categories: life extension, neuroscience

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What if the secret to slowing down aging was hiding in our brains? A groundbreaking study by researchers at the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle, published in Nature in January 2025, may have uncovered some exciting clues. Using cutting-edge technology, the team analyzed over 1.2 million brain cells from young and aged mice to understand how they change with time. They found that certain cells become inflamed, while others lose critical functions, and all eyes are now on the hypothalamus as a key player in the aging process. These findings deepen our understanding of aging and could pave the way for treatments that keep our brains younger for longer.

Jan 6, 2025

Building blocks of life can form long before stars

Posted by in categories: alien life, chemistry

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Early Formation of Life’s Building Blocks

A groundbreaking study published in Nature Astronomy has revealed that amino acids, essential for life, can form in dark interstellar clouds long before stars and planets emerge. Glycine, the simplest amino acid, was shown to form on the surface of icy dust grains in cold, energy-deprived environments through a process called “dark chemistry.” These findings challenge the long-standing belief that UV radiation was required to create glycine, significantly expanding our understanding of how life’s precursors emerge in space.

Jan 6, 2025

History Made As Webb Telescope Finds 44 Stars Near Big Bang — Here’s How It Did It

Posted by in category: cosmology

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Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope have used a distortion in space to reveal over 40 individual stars in a galaxy 6.5 billion light-years from the Milky Way—halfway back to the beginning of the universe. It’s the largest number of individual stars ever detected in the distant universe.

The unique image, which takes advantage of JWST’s high-resolution optics, was only possible because the light from 44 stars in a distant galaxy was magnified by a massive cluster of galaxies in front of it called Abell 370.

This technique, called gravitational lensing—also known as an “Einstein ring” because it was predicted by the famous scientist Albert Einstein—works when the gravitational field of a foreground object distorts the space around it. Light is bent from an object behind it into circular rings or arcs, both revealing the existence of something in the background and, crucially, magnifying it by factors of hundreds or even thousands. In this case, an arc was visible, dubbed the “Dragon Arc.”

Jan 6, 2025

Plasma plume behavior critical for long-duration space missions: Study

Posted by in category: space

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Researchers at the University of Virginia are using advanced simulations to study electron behavior in electric propulsion thrusters.

Jan 6, 2025

Bezos’s Blue Origin poised for first orbital launch next week

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space travel

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Cape Canaveral (AFP) Jan 5, 2025 — Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s company Blue Origin is poised to launch its first orbital rocket next week, marking a pivotal moment in the commercial space race currently dominated by Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

Jan 6, 2025

Why Elon Musk Sees 1 Million People on Mars by the 2040s

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, space

The billionaire SpaceX CEO tasked scientists with designing domes and researching procreation with an eye toward colonizing the Red Planet.

Jan 6, 2025

Sam Altman’s STUNNING New Statement “EVERYTHING is About to Change”

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, singularity

The latest AI News. Learn about LLMs, Gen AI and get ready for the rollout of AGI. Wes Roth covers the latest happenings in the world of OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, NVIDIA and Open Source AI.

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Continue reading “Sam Altman’s STUNNING New Statement ‘EVERYTHING is About to Change’” »

Jan 6, 2025

SpaceX to attempt first payload deployment, engine reuse during Starship Flight 7

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, space travel

Get ready to be inspired by Camp Peavy, a well-known figure in the robotics industry and a passionate member of the HomeBrew Robotics Club in Silicon Valley! 🤖✨

In this engaging Q\&A, Camp dives into his incredible robotics journey, offering unique insights into the world of innovation and technology. He also shares invaluable tips for those who are new to robotics, feeling unsure, or looking for a spark of motivation to dive into this exciting field.

Continue reading “SpaceX to attempt first payload deployment, engine reuse during Starship Flight 7” »

Jan 6, 2025

Could the ESA’s PLATO Mission find Earth 2.0?

Posted by in category: space

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Currently, 5,788 exoplanets have been confirmed in 4,326 star systems, while thousands more candidates await confirmation. So far, the vast majority of these planets have been gas giants (3,826) or Super-Earths (1,735), while only 210 have been “Earth-like”—meaning rocky planets similar in size and mass to Earth.

What’s more, the majority of these planets have been discovered orbiting within M-type (red dwarf) star systems, while only a few have been found orbiting sun-like stars. Nevertheless, no Earth-like planets orbiting within a sun-like star’s habitable zone (HZ) have been discovered so far.

This is largely due to the limitations of existing observatories, which have been unable to resolve Earth-sized planets with longer orbital periods (200 to 500 days). This is where next-generation instruments like the ESA’s PLAnetary Transits and Oscillations of stars (PLATO) mission come into play.

Jan 6, 2025

Just add water: Researchers Extend Lithium Metal Battery Lifespan by 750%

Posted by in categories: life extension, materials

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Lithium metal, a next-generation anode material, has been highlighted for overcoming the performance limitations of commercial batteries. However, issues inherent to lithium metal have caused shortened battery lifespans and increased fire risks. KAIST researchers have achieved a world-class breakthrough by extending the lifespan of lithium metal anodes by approximately 750% using only water.

Their study is published in the journal Advanced Materials.

Professor Il-Doo Kim from KAIST’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering, in collaboration with Professor Jiyoung Lee from Ajou University, successfully stabilized lithium growth and significantly enhanced the lifespan of next-generation lithium metal batteries using eco-friendly hollow nanofibers as protective layers.

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