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Dec 21, 2018

On this day 50 years ago, Apollo 8 was en route to the Moon on the first human flight to lunar orbit

Posted by in category: space travel

Three days later, on Dec. 24, astronauts Bill Anders, Frank Borman and Jim Lovell became the first people to see the Moon’s far side, did a memorable reading from Genesis and took this famous Earthrise photo. Discover more about our #Apollo50 anniversary: https://go.nasa.gov/2EImzGq

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Dec 21, 2018

The man turning China into a quantum superpower

Posted by in category: quantum physics

He’s China’s “father of quantum.”


Jian-Wei Pan, China’s “father of quantum”, is masterminding its drive for global leadership in technologies that could change entire industries.

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Dec 21, 2018

Mars Express beams back images of ice-filled Korolev crater

Posted by in category: space

The stunning Korolev crater in the northern lowlands of Mars is filled with ice all year round owing to a trapped layer of cold Martian air that keeps the water frozen.

The 50-mile-wide crater contains 530 cubic miles of water ice, as much as Great Bear Lake in northern Canada, and in the centre of the crater the ice is more than a mile thick.

Images beamed back from the red planet show that the lip around the impact crater rises high above the surrounding plain. When thin Martian air then passes over the crater, it becomes trapped and cools to form an insulating layer that prevents the ice from melting.

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Dec 21, 2018

Neural Stem Cells Grown From Blood Could Revolutionize Medicine

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience, quantum physics

New nerve cells represent a quantum jump for regenerative therapy.


Unlike other reprogrammed stem cells, these can continue to multiply in a lab.

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Dec 21, 2018

Guitarist plays through brain surgery

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

Remarkable! 🎸 🎶

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Dec 21, 2018

Scientists Find A Brain Circuit That Could Explain Seasonal Depression

Posted by in categories: health, neuroscience

Specialized Cells In Eye Linked To Mood Regions In Brain : Shots — Health News Research suggests the winter blues are triggered by specialized light-sensing cells in the retina that communicate directly with brain areas involved in mood.

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Dec 21, 2018

Huge collision billions of years ago caused Uranus to become lopsided

Posted by in category: space

Something ‘bumped’ into Uranus.

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Dec 21, 2018

Astronomers Found Ancient Remains of a Big Bang “Fossil Cloud”

Posted by in category: cosmology

And it could reveal secrets about the origins of our universe.


And it’s billions of years old.

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Dec 21, 2018

That feeling when Saturn V’s 7.6 million pounds of thrust propel you on the path to the Moon

Posted by in category: space travel

Blast back to the past: https://go.nasa.gov/2EGhX3v


Dec 21, 2018

Cold atoms offer a glimpse of flat physics

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics

These days, movies and video games render increasingly realistic 3D images on 2-D screens, giving viewers the illusion of gazing into another world. For many physicists, though, keeping things flat is far more interesting.

One reason is that flat landscapes can unlock new movement patterns in the quantum world of and electrons. For instance, shedding the third dimension enables an entirely new class of particles to emerge—particles that that don’t fit neatly into the two classes, bosons and fermions, provided by nature. These new particles, known as anyons, change in novel ways when they swap places, a feat that could one day power a special breed of quantum computer.

But anyons and the conditions that produce them have been exceedingly hard to spot in experiments. In a pair of papers published this week in Physical Review Letters, JQI Fellow Alexey Gorshkov and several collaborators proposed new ways of studying this unusual flat physics, suggesting that small numbers of constrained atoms could act as stand-ins for the finicky electrons first predicted to exhibit low-dimensional quirks.

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