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Apr 16, 2019
Liquid Blood Extracted From 42,000-Year-Old Foal Found Frozen in Siberia
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Scientists in the Yakutsk region of Siberia have managed to extract samples of liquid blood from a 42,000-year-old foal that was found embedded in permafrost back in 2018. The scientists are hoping to collect viable cells for the purpose of cloning the extinct species of horse.
The male foal was discovered in the Batagaika depression on August 11, 2018. Permafrost left the remains in remarkably good shape, raising hopes that its cells could be extracted. The specimen is thought to belong to an extinct species of horse known as Lenskaya breed (also known as the Lena horse), as the Siberian Times reported last year.
Apr 16, 2019
Astronomers Have Found Potential Life-Supporting Conditions on The Nearest Exoplanet
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
In August of 2016, astronomers from the European Southern Observatory (ESO) announced the discovery of an exoplanet in the neighboring system of Proxima Centauri. The news was greeted with considerable excitement, as this was the closest rocky planet to our Solar System that also orbited within its star’s habitable zone.
Since then, multiple studies have been conducted to determine if this planet could actually support life.
Apr 16, 2019
Winters Are Only Going to Get Worse, So Researchers Invented a Way to Generate Electricity from Snowfall
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: solar power, sustainability
The farther you get from the equator, the less effective solar panels become at reliably generating power all year round. And it’s not just the shorter spans of sunlight during the winter months that are a problem; even a light dusting of snow can render solar panels ineffective. As a result of global warming, winters are only going to get more severe, but there’s at least one silver lining as researchers from UCLA have come up with a way to harness electricity from all that snow.
The technology they developed is called a snow-based triboelectric nanogenerator (or snow TENG, for short) which generates energy from the exchange of electrons. If you’ve ever received a nasty shock when touching a metal door handle, you’ve already experienced the science at work here. As it falls towards earth, snowflakes are positively charged and ready to give up electrons. In a way, it’s almost free energy ready for the taking, so after testing countless materials with an opposite charge, the UCLA researchers (working with collaborators from the University of Toronto, McMaster University, and the University of Connecticut) found that the negative charge of silicone made it most effective for harvesting electrons when it came into contact with snowflakes.
Apr 16, 2019
The Quest for the Most Elusive Material in Physics
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: energy, physics
Zack Geballe spent months screwing together pairs of polished diamonds at the Carnegie Institution for Science’s Geophysical Laboratory. Theory predicted that squeezed between the diamonds’ tips could be one of the most miraculous substances of modern physics—a material that, at near room temperature, could transport electricity without losing power. He just needed to get the samples to Argonne National Lab outside Chicago to heat them up with laser pulses.
When Argonne beam line scientist Yue Meng turned the lasers on, all four diamonds cracked in half.
“It was a total catastrophe,” Geballe told me while I was visiting him at the Geophysical Laboratory in Washington, DC, this year.
Continue reading “The Quest for the Most Elusive Material in Physics” »
Apr 16, 2019
Bezos Third-Party Seller Shade Could Become Opportunity for Rival eBay
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Highlighting third-party sales, eBay’s bread-and-butter, Amazon’s Bezos may have stoked a fire that could ultimately fuel eBay stock gains.
Apr 16, 2019
Physicists spot the signatures of nuclear fusion in a table-top device
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: nuclear energy, physics
Stable plasma conditions are generated in a Z-pinch device for the first time, offering a new route more compact fusion reactors.
Apr 16, 2019
Cheap, portable scanners could transform brain imaging. But how will scientists deliver the data?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Apr 16, 2019
An AI Invented a Weird Sport Called “Speedgate”
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
Apr 16, 2019
First U.S. Patients Treated With CRISPR As Human Gene-Editing Trials Get Underway
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health
CRISPR Research Moves Out Of Labs And Into Clinics Around The World : Shots — Health News This could be a crucial year for the powerful gene-editing technique CRISPR as researchers start testing it in patients to treat diseases such as cancer, blindness and sickle cell disease.