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Dec 24, 2022

Groundbreaking: Baby girl successfully treated for genetic disease before birth

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Two of Ayla’s siblings had died early in life due to the same disease. But infusions given from 24–36 weeks in utero appears to have saved Ayla’s life.

Dec 24, 2022

Timeline of life extension

Posted by in category: life extension

This is a timeline of life extension, attempting to describe significant and illustrative events on the topic, covering advocacy, experiments, some scientific research, and industry. For more content on life extension research, visit Timeline of senescence research and Timeline of calorie restriction.

Dec 24, 2022

Breakthrough: World’s first urine test for liver cancer developed in Scotland

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Diagnosing cancer today is usually done via surgery, ultrasound scans, or blood tests. All of these methods are invasive and require a visit to a hospital…

Dec 24, 2022

Standard Model survives its biggest challenge yet

Posted by in category: futurism

For years and over three separate experiments, “lepton universality” appeared to violate the Standard Model. LHCb at last proved otherwise.

Dec 24, 2022

New Blood Test Accurately Predicts Alzheimer’s Years Ahead of First Symptoms

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

A new type of blood test can detect a hidden toxin behind Alzheimer’s disease years before a patient shows any symptoms of memory loss or confusion.

If the proof-of-concept can be further tested and scaled, the test could significantly speed up diagnosis, giving millions of patients answers and access to proper care long before their disease progresses.

Researchers at the University of Washington (UW) created the novel blood test. It’s designed to pick up on a molecular precursor in the blood that can cause proteins to irregularly fold and clump in the brain, ultimately forming amyloid beta (Aβ) plaques.

Dec 24, 2022

Is the Milky Way… Normal?

Posted by in categories: chemistry, evolution, space

Studying the large-scale structure of our galaxy isn’t easy. We don’t have a clear view of the Milky Way’s shape and features like we do of other galaxies, largely because we live within it. But we do have some advantages. From within, we’re able to carry out close-up surveys of the Milky Way’s stellar population and its chemical compositions. That gives researchers the tools they need to compare our own galaxy to the many millions of others in the Universe.

This week, an international team of researchers from the USA, UK, and Chile released a paper that does just that. They dug through a catalogue of ten thousand galaxies produced by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, searching for galaxies with similar attributes to our own.

They discovered that the Milky Way has twins – many of them – but just as many that are only superficially similar, with fundamental differences buried in the data. What they discovered has implications for the future evolution of our own galaxy.

Dec 24, 2022

Space satellites could give us clean energy — if they overcome a key obstacle

Posted by in categories: satellites, solar power, sustainability

There’s still a long way to go before beaming power from space becomes a profitable venture.


Space-based solar power satellites could eventually power remote mines, but at the moment they face a major challenge.

Dec 24, 2022

Unbelievable experiment allowed scientists to ‘reverse time’ with a quantum computer

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Time is the most valuable thing that we have in our lives, and we never seem to have enough of it. Whether you’re trying to scratch out more time, or just making the most of what you have, there’s no denying that being able to reverse time would be handy.

Dec 24, 2022

Gene editing: a new modification moves to human tests

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical

In April 2016, Waseem Qasim, a professor of cell and gene therapy, was intrigued by a new scientific paper that described a revolutionary way to manipulate DNA: basic gene editing. The articlepublished by David Liu’s lab at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, described a version of Crispr gene editing that allowed for more precise changes than ever before.

Dec 24, 2022

A Semiconductor Renaissance Is Under Way. It Will Change the World

Posted by in category: innovation

The forces that are fragmenting supply chains are also creating historic opportunities for innovation and growth, writes Alex Capri.