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May 4, 2019
How Isro satellites tracked Fani, saved many lives
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: satellites
CHENNAI: As meteorologists observed a trough of low in the southern http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Indian-Ocean”>Indian Ocean more than a week ago, five Indian satellites kept a constant eye on the system as it brewed into cyclone Fani.
As it developed into an “extremely severe cyclone”, the satellites launched by Isro sent data every 15 minutes to the ground station, helping track and forecast its movement and save hundreds of lives.
According to IMD, data from satellites Insat-3D, Insat-3DR, Scatsat-1, Oceansat-2 and Megha Tropiques was used to study the intensity, location and cloud cover around Fani. There was a cloud cover around the eye of the storm up to 1000km radius, though the rain clouds were only up to a radius of 100 to 200km. The rest were at a height of around 10,000feet.
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May 4, 2019
A novel technique that uses quantum light to measure temperature at the nanoscale
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, nanotechnology
Being able to measure, and monitor, temperatures and temperature changes at miniscule scales—inside a cell or in micro and nano-electronic components—has the potential to impact many areas of research from disease detection to a major challenge of modern computation and communication technologies, how to measure scalability and performance in electronic components.
May 4, 2019
Brain-Inspired Computing Could Lead to Better Neuroscience Models
Posted by Marcos Than Esponda in categories: biological, computing, neuroscience
Building a Silicon Brain Computer chips based on biological neurons may help simulate larger and more-complex brain models.
#MayTheFourthBeWithYou from the real-world Space Warfighters at Air Force Space Command! You will now watch this video we made—unless Jedi mind tricks don’t work on you. Either way, please share! #StarWarsDay
👽 The odds that you have already met a space alien are not zero.
An uptick in UFO sightings by military pilots raises all sorts of interesting questions.
May 4, 2019
Experimental Autism Drugs Aim to Improve Social Communication Skills
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
Experts caution that addressing lingering questions will require more research.
- By Nicholette Zeliadt, Spectrum on May 2, 2019
May 4, 2019
Scientists Have Finally Achieved Direct Counterfactual Quantum Communication
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
Quantum communication is a strange beast, but one of the weirdest proposed forms of it is called counterfactual communication — a type of quantum communication where no particles travel between two recipients.
Theoretical physicists have long proposed that such a form of communication would be possible, but in 2017, for the first time, researchers were able to experimentally achieve it — transferring a black and white bitmap image from one location to another without sending any physical particles.
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May 4, 2019
Multivascular networks and functional intravascular topologies within biocompatible hydrogels
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: biotech/medical, food, mathematics, space travel
In air-breathing vertebrates, the circulatory and pulmonary systems contain separate networks of channels that intertwine but do not intersect with each other. Recreating such structures within cell-compatible materials has been a major challenge; even a single vasculature system can be a burden to create. Grigoryan et al. show that natural and synthetic food dyes can be used as photoabsorbers that enable stereolithographic production of hydrogels containing intricate and functional vascular architectures. Using this approach, they demonstrate functional vascular topologies for studies of fluid mixers, valves, intervascular transport, nutrient delivery, and host engraftment.
Science, this issue p. 458
Solid organs transport fluids through distinct vascular networks that are biophysically and biochemically entangled, creating complex three-dimensional (3D) transport regimes that have remained difficult to produce and study. We establish intravascular and multivascular design freedoms with photopolymerizable hydrogels by using food dye additives as biocompatible yet potent photoabsorbers for projection stereolithography. We demonstrate monolithic transparent hydrogels, produced in minutes, comprising efficient intravascular 3D fluid mixers and functional bicuspid valves. We further elaborate entangled vascular networks from space-filling mathematical topologies and explore the oxygenation and flow of human red blood cells during tidal ventilation and distension of a proximate airway. In addition, we deploy structured biodegradable hydrogel carriers in a rodent model of chronic liver injury to highlight the potential translational utility of this materials innovation.
May 4, 2019
Pirates Made Ocean Vortex ‘The Great Whirl’ Inaccessible. So Scientists Studied It from Space
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: space
Using satellite data, scientists are tracking the annual formation of an enormous ocean vortex off the coast of Somalia.