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News & Articles By Edsel Cook
11/18/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Quantum computer allows you to see “multiple futures”
Quantum computers might one day predict the future. While looking at more than 14 million possible futures remains out of reach, the quantum simulator used by Singaporean researchers proved capable of viewing 16 different outcomes. Traditional computers code data as binary digits (bits) of either 0 or 1. Their quantum counterparts store information into quantum […]
11/17/2019
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By Edsel Cook
The moon is tectonically active and STILL shrinking, leaving cliffs on its surface, according to data from NASA missions
The Earth’s natural satellite may be wrinkling “like a raisin.” New findings showed that the moon remains tectonically active and still experiences “moonquakes” such as those picked up by sensors from the Apollo program over 50 years ago. The moonquakes followed what experts called thrust faults – cliffs (scarps) that emerged on the brittle lunar […]
11/17/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Novel finding suggests magnets can improve working memory
There may be a new alternative option for treating Alzheimer’s disease or dementia without resorting to toxic pharmaceutical drugs. A new approach uses magnets to stimulate the brain’s working memory. Researchers at Duke University have recently debuted an experimental therapy called repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) which applies a high-frequency magnetic pulse to the left prefrontal cortex […]
11/16/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Researchers develop displacement sensor that reveals important data about the nature of gravity
A Japanese research team has come up with a displacement sensor that measures the gravitational force exerted by the smallest masses. They believe that their new instrument has made it possible to study the nature of gravity in greater detail. Gravity remains one of the most mysterious phenomena in modern science. The physical laws that […]
11/15/2019
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By Edsel Cook
High-intensity sound waves and lasers: How does the loudest underwater sound ever affect materials and biological samples?
What would you do if you had access to one of the most powerful lasers in the world? Stanford researchers used the said high-output device to create one of the loudest sounds possible underwater. They wanted to know the effects of that sound on both materials and biological organisms. Sound is more than meets the […]
11/13/2019
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By Edsel Cook
“Near miss” between galaxies produces new generation of stars and planets
Millions of years ago, two galaxies barely avoided colliding with each other. Their near-collision triggered such intense forces that new stars and planets have spawned on the galactic sides that all but brushed each other by. Researchers recently released photos that the Hubble Space Telescope took of the NGC 4485 galaxy. A part of the […]
11/13/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Major core protein in plants helps fight infection
Researchers have identified a core protein in plants that may play a significant role in fighting off infectious bacteria. The molecule has been shown to control the immune response of plants. When activated, the molecule boosts the immune system of plants, allowing them to resist diseases. It may help protect crops against bacterial infections. The […]
11/12/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Researchers find biomarker for identifying chronic fatigue syndrome
People who have chronic fatigue syndrome finally have a way to prove their condition exists – something they’ve been looking for the longest time. Researchers from Stanford Medicine have developed a blood test that offers an accurate and reliable way to diagnose the disease. “Too often, this disease is categorized as imaginary,” explained Ron Davis, a professor of biochemistry at […]
11/11/2019
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By Edsel Cook
The Earth’s mantle is a “geochemically diverse mosaic,” reveals team of geologists
The typical visual depiction of the Earth’s mantle as a solid band of yellow-orange sitting between the crust and core has just received an update. A recent paper in Nature Geoscience now describes it as “more heterogenous” than what people previously thought. An international group led by the University of Utah provided a more diverse representation of the mantle, far different compared […]
11/10/2019
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By Edsel Cook
Scientists successfully brew beer and mead using 5,000-year-old “resurrected” yeasts discovered in the Holy Land
Want to know what ancient Middle Eastern beer tastes like? Try asking this team of researchers from Israel: In a study published in mBio, microbiologists and archeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority and four local universities used yeast strains that lay dormant for thousands of years to brew potable “ancient beers.” For the multi-layered study, researchers isolated yeast from tiny […]
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