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Deborah Bloomfield

The US Has Ordered Five New Jets For Their New “Doomsday Plane” Fleet

May 14, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The plan to create the successor to the US Air Force’s Nightwatch aircraft – the so-called “Doomsday plane” that acts as an airborne strategic command and control post in the event of nuclear war – is gaining traction.  Advertisement In April, Sierra Nevada Corporation won a $13 billion contract with the Pentagon to build the […]

Filed Under: News

Writing By Hand Is Surprisingly Important For Thinking And Learning

May 14, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

When was the last time you wrote something down by hand? For many of us, writing by hand may have become an infrequent – if not abandoned – practice. The ability to make notes on phones or to type out ideas with keyboards is generally quicker and easier, but is the value of writing by […]

Filed Under: News

New Seabed Batteries Could Provide Cheaper Energy Storage

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Energy storage company BaroMar is preparing to test a new kind of grid-level energy storage that relies on water to function. If it works, it will be a cheaper way to stabilize renewable energy over longer periods of time.  Advertisement The world is gradually moving towards zero-carbon energy options, but the road ahead is not […]

Filed Under: News

When Did Flowering Plants Evolve? Huge Study Shakes Up Their Tree Of Life

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

How and when flowering plants evolved has been a longstanding question in botany – one that has a huge impact on the field and beyond, also affecting conservation, agriculture, and even medicine. Now, with the creation of the most detailed tree of life so far, we are poised to get some answers. After a mammoth sequencing […]

Filed Under: News

Giant Viruses With Ancient Origins Lurk In Yellowstone’s Hot Springs

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

In the bubbling, super-acidic hot springs of Yellowstone National Park there lives a strange gang of viruses with an ancient origin. Because thermophiles – organisms that thrive at scorching hot temperatures – are deeply rooted in the evolutionary “tree of life,” it might even be possible to learn about the origins of life by studying […]

Filed Under: News

What Dr Vera Rubin Saw In Spiral Galaxies Changed Physics Forever

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you are even vaguely interested in the way the universe works, you have likely read about a mysterious substance proposed by physicists called “dark matter“. Advertisement Dark matter is invisible matter that doesn’t emit, reflect, or absorb light, and only interacts with normal matter through gravity. We have never detected it directly – but […]

Filed Under: News

Time Seems To Move Slower In This One Place, And You Might Be Going There Today

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

You’re in the gym, and it’s nearly the end of your workout. You’re finishing on the stationary bike, so you hop on and get pedaling, dreaming of what you’re going to cook for dinner…but then you look at the clock. You’ve been cycling for longer than that, right? According to a new study, time really […]

Filed Under: News

Supercapacitors Become More Super With 19 Times As Much Capacitance

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Two approaches to improving the amount of charge that capacitors can store look to be bearing fruit, based on simultaneous publications by unconnected teams. Each offers the potential to make supercapacitors more potent energy storage devices, and perhaps put them into the race for large-scale energy storage. Advertisement Supercapacitors have long had an advantage over […]

Filed Under: News

Purest Silicon Might Be Secret Ingredient To Build Reliable Quantum Computers

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Silicon is the cornerstone of computing. Its properties and abundance have made it so. You are reading this on a device that uses silicon chips. Quantum computers are the next giant leap in computing, capable of doing calculations that not even our most powerful supercomputers can do. And they might still based on silicon, but […]

Filed Under: News

A 100-Pound River Monster That Feeds At Night Is Eating Way Too Much

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

An invasive river monster has become a big problem for native wildlife in parts of the US and Canda. The flathead catfish is set to become an apex predator as it eats its way through America, having been detected as far as Canada. Advertisement The flathead catfish (Pylodictis olivaris) really is a river monster, with […]

Filed Under: News

Why Were Aurorae Seen So Far Away From The Poles This Weekend?

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

This weekend was a treat for lovers of the night sky all the way to mid-latitudes. The intense solar activity of the past week culminated in an extreme auroral event seen even to latitudes where you usually do not see such night sky spectacle. Social media was wonderfully inundated with pictures – probably helped by […]

Filed Under: News

What Do Maple Syrup Bottles Have Those Tiny Handles For?

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you’ve ever had good waffles (i.e. drenched in maple syrup), you have probably noticed a tiny little handle on the bottle. Advertisement Obviously, these handles are pretty impractical for pouring the syrup by anyone with hands bigger than a baby’s, and are largely ignored during the pouring process. So why are they there? One […]

Filed Under: News

Largest-Ever 3D-Mapped Piece Of The Human Brain Could Still Fit On A Grain Of Rice

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

This vivid rainbow of cells represents the largest-ever high-resolution 3D map of a section of the human brain. The largest, yes, but still just a cubic millimeter in size – about half a grain of rice. With this feat, scientists can now see the intricate web of 57,000 cells, connected by 150 million synapses and […]

Filed Under: News

Life-Giving Phosphorus May Come From A Rare Type Of Nova

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Phosphorus is one of the few elements that may be essential for life, but its origins are something of a mystery. Core-collapse supernovae are known to form some phosphorus, but this source alone can’t explain its abundance and distribution within the galaxy. If novae, rather than supernovae, are the main source of phosphorus then what […]

Filed Under: News

China’s Efforts To Get Kids More Active Appear To Be Working

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Back in 2021, China instituted the world’s first series of national regulations to try and curb sedentary behavior in children. Almost three years on, a team led by scientists at the University of Bristol has taken a close look at the results of the measures. The conclusion? They seem to be working. Advertisement For a […]

Filed Under: News

Warp Drives May Be Possible Using Real Physics, First-Of-Its-Kind Model Hints

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Making the jump to warp speed might not require us to leap beyond the limits of physics, a team of researchers has argued. Previously, all models for achieving this ultra-fast propulsion have relied on whimsical energy sources that contradict the properties of matter, yet the new study suggests it may be possible to build a […]

Filed Under: News

Europe’s Ariane 6 Rocket Is About To Launch – Here’s Why It’s A Big Deal

May 13, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

The wait is almost over: Europe will once again have its own access to space as Ariane 6 is set to make its inaugural launch this summer. The date will be announced soon, but is expected to be some time between mid-June and the end of July. Across Europe and beyond, there is a lot […]

Filed Under: News

Sourdough Under The Microscope Reveals Microbes Cultivated Over Generations

May 11, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Sourdough is the oldest kind of leavened bread in recorded history, and people have been eating it for thousands of years. The components of creating a sourdough starter are very simple – flour and water. Mixing them produces a live culture where yeast and bacteria ferment the sugars in flour, making byproducts that give sourdough […]

Filed Under: News

Oregon’s Infamous Exploding Whale Incident Of 1970

May 11, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

It’s been 54 years since the infamous Exploding Whale of Oregon incident of 1970. Back in 2020, the Oregon Historical Society released footage of the frankly baffling event, in which the highway patrol, under the guidance of the Navy, turned a beached whale into a meaty rainshower. Advertisement The video puts the incident into glorious […]

Filed Under: News

You Can Tell If Someone’s A Psychopath By Watching Their Head Movement

May 11, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

People with high levels of psychopathic personality traits may move their heads less when they’re talking than those with lower degrees of psychopathy, new research has revealed. According to the study authors, this subtle pattern of nonverbal communication had previously been identified in male psychopaths, and their findings suggest that the same tendencies also apply […]

Filed Under: News

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