Page 11082
Jun 17, 2016
Lab-grown sperm makes healthy offspring
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, health
Sperm have been made in the laboratory and used to father healthy baby mice in a pioneering move that could lead to infertility treatments.
The Chinese research took a stem cell, converted it into primitive sperm and fertilised an egg to produce healthy pups.
The study, in the Journal Cell Stem Cell, showed they were all healthy and grew up to have offspring of their own.
Jun 17, 2016
Future terrorist attacks could be carried out by drones carrying buckets of ACID
Posted by Zoltan Istvan in categories: 3D printing, drones, terrorism
An article by the Mirror on possible future drone terrorist attacks:
Swarms of cheap 3D-printed drones could be used to carry out deadly terror attacks.
Jun 17, 2016
QuintessenceLabs getting truly random with quantum security
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: government, quantum physics, security
Canberra-based QuintessenceLabs has taken its university research and transformed it into a quantum security firm, with its products used globally by the likes of the United States government.
Jun 17, 2016
Researchers refine method for detecting quantum entanglement
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics
RMIT quantum computing researchers have developed and demonstrated a method capable of efficiently detecting high-dimensional entanglement.
Entanglement in quantum physics is the ability of two or more particles to be related to each other in ways which are beyond what is possible in classical physics.
Having information on a particle in an entangled ensemble reveals an “unnatural” amount of information on the other particles.
Jun 17, 2016
Quantum Hub meet learns how military is developing applications
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: military, quantum physics
Such technologies “will improve the accuracy of measuring time, frequency, rotation, magnetic fields and gravity.”
Jun 17, 2016
Physicists say they’ve figured out how to ‘see’ inside a black hole
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: cosmology, physics
Physicists have come up with a new way to predict what lies beyond the event horizon of a black hole, and it could give us a more accurate idea of their mysterious internal structures.
Thanks to the first — and now second — direct observation of gravitational waves emanating from what scientists think are black hole mergers, we’re starting to get our first real evidence that black holes do actually exist in reality, not just theory.
But even if we can prove they really do physically exist, there’s no getting around the fact that, thanks to their enormous gravitational pull, black holes swallow up anything that falls beyond their event horizon.
Continue reading “Physicists say they’ve figured out how to ‘see’ inside a black hole” »
The old-style educational system gives you an ‘A’ and demotes you when you do something wrong. The gaming world gives you a 0 and rewards you when you do something right.