Some say - dona worry about IA, but .
TechCrunch
Relax, artificial intelligence isn’t coming for your job
There is a pervasive underlying fear from generations raised on dystopian science fiction that artificial intelligence and robotics will be the undoing of humankind. Eventually, the conventional…
For the first time, researchers have shown that they can protect mice from urinary tract infections using a vaccine that targets iron-snatching chemicals released by E. coli
Telegraph
Vaccines that rob microbes of iron could fight food poisoning, UTIs
You’re probably not aware of it, but when you’re suffering from a bad case of food poisoning or another infection, bacteria are busy stealing iron from you. Many microbes use special chemicals to snatch away the metal, which they need to reproduce. But this…
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Here’s what would happen if you fell into a black hole on @science
Bringing silicon to life.
Telegraph
Scientists persuade nature to make silicon-carbon bonds
A new study is the first to show that living organisms can be persuaded to make silicon-carbon bonds--something only chemists had done before. Scientists have "bred" a bacterial protein to have the ability to make the human-made bonds--a finding that has…
How highly potent antibody neutralizes Zika infection discovered.
Telegraph
First steps to neutralizing Zika
As Zika spreads throughout the world, the call for rapid development of therapeutics to treat Zika rings loud and clear. Taking a step further in identifying a possible therapeutic candidate, a team of researchers has discovered the mechanism by which C10…
DNA makes up only half of the material inside chromosomes — far less than was previously thought — a study has revealed.
Telegraph
Only half of a chromosome is DNA, 3-D imaging reveals
Up to 47 per cent of their structure is a mysterious sheath that surrounds the genetic material, researchers say. While the precise function of this sheath is unknown, researchers suggest it may keep chromosomes isolated from one another during the key process…
Novel method for creating supercapacitors shows remarkable results.
Telegraph
A phone that charges in seconds?
The novel method from the University of Central Florida's NanoScience Technology Center could eventually revolutionize technology as varied as mobile phones and electric vehicles. "If they were to replace the batteries with these supercapacitors, you could…
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Frozen beneath a region of cracked and pitted plains on Mars lies about as much water as what's in Lake Superior, largest of the Great Lakes, researchers using NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter have determined.
Telegraph
Mars ice deposit holds as much water as Lake Superior
Scientists examined part of Mars' Utopia Planitia region, in the mid-northern latitudes, with the orbiter's ground-penetrating Shallow Radar (SHARAD) instrument. Analyses of data from more than 600 overhead passes with the onboard radar instrument reveal…
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This microscope only costs $1 !!! Must have! @science
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New, Groundbreaking Revelation Brings Us Closer to Nuclear Fusion.
Telegraph
A THEORY FOR EVERYTHING
Researchers from the U.S. DOE’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) and Princeton University may have solved the mystery surrounding magnetic reconnection, bringing us one step closer to better solar flare prediction and (pmost notably) problems s…
Physicists Have Discovered _
Telegraph
A Second State Of Liquid Water
So, scientists found out that there is a second liquid state of water. But what does that actually mean? Well, states of matter are determined by the shape, density, intermolecular distance and various other properties of compounds. So an international team…
Science Discoveries: .
Telegraph
The Eruptions Of Water Vapor On Europa
The Europa is the bright orange color and it is completely covered in a thick layer of ice. Its surface has a very strange appearance, unique in the solar system, and it is among the brightest objects, as a result of the reflected sun rays with a relatively…
Earth's Deepest Water May Be 1,000 Kilometers Below The Surface.
Telegraph
How deep does Earth’s water go? Well, if this latest study is correct, pretty darn deep – a third of the way to Earth’s core.
That’s the conclusion of Steve Jacobsen at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois and his colleagues. Their study is published in Lithos, and was recently picked up by New Scientist.
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The world's largest solar power plant was just unveiled in India @science
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A giant experiment that cracked a 100-year mystery of physics just came back online — and it's more powerful than everLIGO
Telegraph
LIGO
In February 2016, physicists declared the century-long search for gravitational waves was over. Einstein predicted the existence of such ripples in the fabric of spacetime in 1915, but he doubted their weak signatures could be detected. But more than 1,000…