Latest posts
Nov 3, 2024
Unusual “Time-Travel” Creature Can Age in Reverse, Astonishing Scientists
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: life extension, time travel
A recent article in PNAS unveils a remarkable discovery: the ability for reverse development in a ctenophore, commonly known as a comb jelly. These findings indicate that life cycle flexibility in animals may be more widespread than previously believed.
Animal life cycles typically follow a familiar pattern, declined in countless variations: they are born, grow, reproduce, and die, giving way to the next generation. Only a few species are able to deviate from this general principle, the best-known example being the ‘immortal jellyfish’ Turritopsis dohrnii, which can revert from an adult medusa back to a polyp. This elusive group of animals with flexible life cycles now includes the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi.
“The work challenges our understanding of early animal development and body plans, opening new avenues for the study of life cycle plasticity and rejuvenation. The fact that we have found a new species that uses this peculiar “time-travel machine” raises fascinating questions about how spread this capacity is across the animal tree of life,” said Joan J. Soto-Angel, a postdoctoral fellow in the Manet Team at the Department of Natural History at the University of Bergen.
Nov 3, 2024
SpaceX’s $2.9 Billion NASA Ship To Land Astronauts On Moon Revealed
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space travel
SpaceX’s initial design for its $2.9 billion NASA Human Landing System (HLS) ship to land astronauts on the Moon is revealed.
Nov 3, 2024
Physicists break magnetism rules to boost quantum computers, superconductors
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: computing, quantum physics
This complete shell structure results in enhanced stability compared to isotopes with different configurations.
“100 Sn is also the heaviest nucleus comprising protons and neutrons in equal numbers — a feature that enhances the contribution of the short-range proton–neutron pairing interaction and strongly influences its decay via the weak interaction,” CERN researchers remarked in a previous study.
“Understanding the nuclear properties in the vicinity of 100 Sn, which has been suggested to be the heaviest doubly magic nucleus with proton number Z (50) equal to neutron number N (50), has been a long-standing challenge for experimental and theoretical nuclear physics,” said the research team in the study.
Nov 3, 2024
How exosomes could become more than just an “anti-aging” fad
Posted by Arthur Brown in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
They might not make you beautiful, but research suggests exosomes might help us diagnose and treat diseases.
Nov 3, 2024
Senescent Cells Promote Cartilage Regeneration in Rats
Posted by Arthur Brown in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
In a rat experiment, researchers publishing in Aging Cell have found that senescent cells and SASP factors are key in regenerating knee cartilage.
Not always negative
Cellular senescence is widely known to have negative effects, to the point that it is one of the hallmarks of aging. In fact, rather than protecting cartilage, cellular senescence has been reported to damage it in the progression of osteoarthritis [1]. However, the idea that senescence is beneficial for regeneration is not a new concept [2], and it has been found to assist wound healing in mice [3]. Understanding everything involved in this complex relationship is not easy, and one of the factors appears to be windows of time [4].
Nov 3, 2024
Two Students Created Face Recognition Glasses. It Wasn’t Hard
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
On a recent Friday afternoon, Kashif Hoda was waiting for a train near Harvard Square when a young man asked him for directions.
A month later, he found out just how strange. He had been an unwitting guinea pig in an experiment meant to show just how easy it was to rig artificial intelligence tools to identify someone and retrieve the person’s biographical information — potentially including a phone number and home address — without the person’s realizing it.
A friend texted Mr. Hoda, telling him that he was in a video that was going viral. Mr. Nguyen and a fellow Harvard student, Caine Ardayfio, had built glasses used for identifying strangers in real time, and had demonstrated them on two “real people” at the subway station, including Mr. Hoda, whose name was incorrectly transcribed in the video captions as “Vishit.”
Continue reading “Two Students Created Face Recognition Glasses. It Wasn’t Hard” »
Nov 3, 2024
Israeli startup says it can help detect deadly terror drones with smart signal tech
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: drones
As some UAVs from Hezbollah and other Iranian proxies keep evading Israel’s air defenses, tech execs say detection is the first step to remedying this defensive weakness.
Nov 3, 2024
Israel plans to use lasers to shoot down incoming missiles
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: drones, military
Israel expects its “Iron Beam” laser defense system to be operational within one year, saying it will bring “a new era of warfare” as it engages in a war of drones and missiles with Iran and its regional partners.
The Jewish state spent more than $500 million on deals this week with Israeli developers Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, architect of Israel’s Iron Dome, and Elbit Systems to expand production of the shield. Dubbed the Iron Beam, the shield aims to use high-power lasers to counter an array of projectiles, including missiles, drones, rockets and mortars, Israel’s defense ministry said this week.
“It heralds the beginning of a new era in warfare,” Eyal Zamir, director general of the defense ministry, said in a statement this week. “The initial capability of the ground-based laser system… is expected to enter operational service within one year,” he said.