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Feb 13, 2020

Electrode Brain Implant Could Potentially Zap People Out of Comas

Posted by in category: neuroscience

It’s a ways off from use, but this dream could be a waking reality soon.

Feb 13, 2020

Top CDC official says US should prepare for coronavirus ‘to take a foothold’

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday it is preparing for the new coronavirus, which has killed at least 1,115 and sickened more than 45,000 worldwide, to “take a foothold in the U.S.”

“At some point, we are likely to see community spread in the U.S. or in other countries,” Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told reporters on a conference call. “This will trigger a change in our response strategy.”

Feb 13, 2020

New material has highest electron mobility among known layered magnetic materials

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics

All the elements are there to begin with, so to speak; it’s just a matter of figuring out what they are capable of—alone or together. For Leslie Schoop’s lab, one recent such investigation has uncovered a layered compound with a trio of properties not previously known to exist in one material.

With an international interdisciplinary team, Schoop, assistant professor of chemistry, and Postdoctoral Research Associate Shiming Lei, published a paper last week in Science Advances reporting that the van der Waals material gadolinium tritelluride (GdTe3) displays the highest electronic mobility among all known layered . In addition, it has magnetic order, and can easily be exfoliated.

Combined, these properties make it a promising candidate for new areas like magnetic twistronic devices and spintronics, as well as advances in data storage and device design.

Feb 13, 2020

US military prepping for coronavirus pandemic

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, military

U.S. Northern Command is bracing for an outbreak of the new coronavirus on U.S. soil, if it should occur.

Feb 13, 2020

Calling all veterinarians: the Dog Aging Project needs you

Posted by in category: life extension

Practice teams are urged to share details with clients about this canine longevity study, whose long-term goal is to help pets and people live longer, healthier lives.

Feb 13, 2020

Stress is not good for your immune system

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Read more

Feb 13, 2020

The Faster, Cheaper, Better Way to Charge Electric Vehicles

Posted by in categories: futurism, transportation

Opinion: Chinese carmaker Nio, the world’s newest electric vehicle unicorn, has a big idea: battery swapping. And there might be something to it.


Opinion: Forget fast-charging. Battery swapping is back—and it’s the tech of the future.

Feb 13, 2020

The Company That Wants to Fling Rockets Into Space With a Giant Centrifuge

Posted by in categories: business, internet, satellites

The rapidly falling cost of getting into orbit has spurred a boom in the space industry as a host of new applications become economical. Now a secretive startup plans to slash the cost to just $250,000 by flinging rockets into space rather than firing them.

Over the last decade, the pioneering work done by SpaceX has shown that getting stuff into orbit doesn’t need to be so expensive and that there are viable business opportunities to be had in the private space industry. Combined with advances in satellite technology, there’s now a thriving market for small, inexpensive spacecraft in low- E arth orbit doing everything from remote sensing to delivering broadband internet access.

But while costs have fallen dramatically, the cheapest option for reaching low-Earth orbit —a rideshare on SpaceX’s Falcon 9—still starts at $1 million, and launches only happen twice a month at best. California-based startup SpinLaunch says its technology will allow up to five launches a day for as little as $250,000.

Feb 12, 2020

AI Predicts Coronavirus Vulnerable to HIV’s Atazanavir

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI

An international collaboration between researchers at Deargen and Dankook University in the Republic of Korea, and Emory University in the United States, have published a prediction model for antiviral drugs that may be effective on 2019-nCoV.

The work is published in the article “Predicting commercially available antiviral drugs that may act on the novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV), Wuhan, China, through a drug-target interaction deep learning model” posted on the bioRxiv preprint server.


When an international team used an AI model to suggest available drugs that could be used against 2019-nCoV, the top candidates targeted viral proteinases.

Continue reading “AI Predicts Coronavirus Vulnerable to HIV’s Atazanavir” »

Feb 12, 2020

Graphene forms under microscope’s eye

Posted by in categories: electronics, materials

You don’t need a big laser to make laser-induced graphene (LIG). Scientists at Rice University, the University of Tennessee, Knoxville (UT Knoxville) and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) are using a very small visible beam to burn the foamy form of carbon into microscopic patterns.


Scientists record the formation of foamy laser-induced graphene made with a small laser mounted to a scanning electron microscope. The reduced size of the conductive material may make it more useful for flexible electronics.