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dejanpetkow

Bioengineering to generate healthy skin - 1 views

  • That is, using a small biopsy from a specific patient, they can generate almost the entire cutaneous surface of that individual in the lab.
  • that it is possible to isolate epidermic stem cells from patients with different genetic skin diseases, cultivate them and, using molecular engineering as a first step, incorporate the therapeutic genes into each patient's genome to take the place of the one that the patient does not have or that functions abnormally. Afterwards, in the second step, the stem cells would be assembled into patches ready to be transplanted onto the patients.
  • "What we did in this case -- explains Marcela del Río -- was to transfer a normal SPINK-5 gene to a patient's stem cells and later use these cells to generate skin that could be transplanted to experimental models, such as mice."
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    Nice approach to generate healthy skin and to patch parts or to replace the overall human skin. Next step - clinical studies.
Joris _

Yammer : The Enterprise Social Network - 3 views

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    "Yammer is a tool for making companies and organizations more productive through the exchange of short frequent answers to one simple question: What are you working on?" Have you tried it yet?
Joris _

Video: Japan's Defense Ministry Develops Awesome Ball-Shaped Drone - 1 views

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    The integration makes it pretty innovative.
Ma Ru

Envisioning the future of technology - 2 views

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    You'll like it...
Thijs Versloot

Lasers May Solve the Black Hole Information Paradox - 0 views

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    "In an effort to help solve the black hole information paradox that has immersed theoretical physics in an ocean of soul searching for the past two years, two researchers have thrown their hats into the ring with a novel solution: Lasers. Technically, we're not talking about the little flashy devices you use to keep your cat entertained, we're talking about the underlying physics that produces laser light and applying it to information that falls into a black hole. According to the researchers, who published a paper earlier this month to the journal Classical and Quantum Gravity (abstract), the secret to sidestepping the black hole information paradox (and, by extension, the 'firewall' hypothesis that was recently argued against by Stephen Hawking) lies in stimulated emission of radiation (the underlying physics that generates laser light) at the event horizon that is distinct from Hawking radiation, but preserves information as matter falls into a black hole."
Thijs Versloot

Deep drilling on Mars - 0 views

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    The scientific rationale behind it is that at km-depth there could be a) water resources (which could support a biosphere) and b) understand the formation of Mars. I would argue that an efficient drilling (robot) is also valuable for possible developing underground habitation (caves) at some point. This paper mentions two drilling concepts, but we could come up with many more (bio-inspired) probably. Daniel already came up with a nice one.. microwave drilling Also, the NASA InSight probe to Mars in 2016 is using a DLR-designed 'Mole' drill that is designed to reach a depth of... 5 meters
  • ...1 more comment...
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    Doesn't this one fit in nicely with your ablation giant mirror power beaming thing you were working on?
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    In this case I was thinking more about a smaller and controlled digging effort.. not ablating a football field sized hole
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    Nice one! plenty of examples in nature for this
johannessimon81

42 - a constant of nature - 3 views

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    It turns out that falling along any straight line through the Earth takes 42 minutes (GravIty train). I think this has not been opted as an explanation of Douglas Adams' 42 but this fact is definItely quIte beautiful.
Thijs Versloot

Google plans for internet from space with 180 LEO satellites - 2 views

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    The Wall Street Journal hears that the search firm is preparing to build 180 "small, high capacity" satellites that will go into low orbit and provide internet connections to underserved areas
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    sorry, did not see your earlier post ... fully altruistic move of course as they claim
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    actually I posted about it first :P
Athanasia Nikolaou

New greenhouse effect - H2 and N2 do not absorb radiation on their own, but at high concentrations they can act like greenhouse gases when they interact. - 2 views

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    A new mechanism was discovered on how H2 and N2 participate in the radiation budget. This may help to resolve the "faint young sun paradox", a hypothesis according to which during the earlier age of the solar system when sun radiation had lower intensity than now, the earth was warmer. Extended, it could reassess the past habitability of Mars.
Thijs Versloot

Effectively Universal Behavior of Rotating Neutron Stars in General Relativity Makes Them Even Simpler than Their Newtonian Counterparts - 0 views

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    Recently, it was shown that slowly rotating neutron stars exhibit an interesting correlation between their moment of inertia I, their quadrupole moment Q, and their tidal deformation Love number λ (the I-Love-Q relations), independently of the equation of state of the compact object. By exploiting this relation, we can describe quite accurately the geometry around a neutron star with fewer parameters, even if we don't know precisely the equation of state. Side note: I-Love-Q relations? Some inner chuckles in the Fundamental Physicist community.. :)
Thijs Versloot

Is Westeros orbiting a binary star system? #ArXiv - 5 views

shared by Thijs Versloot on 21 May 14 - No Cached
Nicholas Lan liked it
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    To right that appalling wrong, here we attempt to explain the apparently erratic seasonal changes in the world of G.R.R.M. A natural explanation for such phenomena is the unique behavior of a circumbinary planet. Thus, by speculating that the planet under scrutiny is orbiting a pair of stars, we utilize the power of numerical three-body dynamics to predict that, unfortunately, it is not possible to predict either the length, or the severity of any coming winter.
LeopoldS

Philae's first touchdown seen by Rosetta | Rosetta - ESA's comet chaser - 3 views

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    Thats spot on where it should have been, pretty impressive!
jcunha

Mystery of where Earth's water came from deepens: Comet water is different - 2 views

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    "Over the past few months, the European Space Agency's Rosetta space probe closely examined the type of comet that some scientists theorized could have brought water to our planet 4 billion years ago. It found water, but the wrong kind."
jcunha

Cloud cities for Venus exploration - 3 views

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    Our friends from NASA have come out with a plan to the human exploration of Venus in the time that everyone is speaking about Mars.
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    Love the concept acronym, which pretty much says it all... Not sure which astronaut would fancy floating around in an atmosphere where clouds are made of sulphuric acid. Besides I don't see the point of a manned mission if one can't reach the surface.. tele-operation would be easy and so much cheaper.
Thijs Versloot

Properties of galaxies reproduced by hydrodynamic simulation (VIDEO) - 3 views

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    Scientists at MIT have traced 13 billion years of galaxy evolution, from shortly after the Big Bang to the present day. Their simulation, named Illustris, captures both the massive scale of the Universe and the intriguing variety of galaxies - something previous modelers have struggled to do. IT produces a Universe that looks remarkably similar to what we see through our telescopes, giving us greater confidence in our understanding of the Universe, from the laws of physics to our theories about galaxy formation. "Simulation is the future of innovation"
Athanasia Nikolaou

More science crowdsourcing games! - "EyeWire" - 4 views

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    There is this optical neuron that gets stimulated from motion. Mapping it is difficult in the lab: "The stumbling block is a lack of fine-grained anatomical detail about how the neurons in the retina are wired up to each other." So, use people deciphering from 2D images --> the 3D neuron structure using the human spatial reasoning to figure out what is part of a branching cell and what is just background noise in the images (yet incomparable to their best algorithms' performance) 120.000 users so far mapped 2% of the retina
annaheffernan

Laser shines a new light on isotope separation - 0 views

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    A new method of separating nuclear isotopes that exploits the slight differences in their electronic energy levels has been developed by physicists in the US. The energy-efficient separator was used to create isotopically pure lithium-7, which is used in some nuclear reactors. Good news for any future nuclear powered space missions perhaps? it could potentially replace the current (and much less energy efficient) methods that were developed in the 1950's
Thijs Versloot

Reality - Almost No Patented Discoveries Ever Get Used @WIRED - 3 views

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    The unspoken reality is that the U.S. patent system creates a market so constricted by high transaction costs and legal risks that it excludes the vast majority of small and mid-sized businesses and prevents literally 95 percent of all patented discoveries from ever being put to use to create new products and services, new jobs, and new economic growth.
Thijs Versloot

Improved Saturn Positions Help Spacecraft Navigation, Planet Studies, Fundamental Physics - 0 views

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    Scientists have used the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) radio-telescope system and NASA's Cassini spacecraft to measure the position of Saturn and its family of moons to within about a mile -- at a range of nearly a billion miles.
Thijs Versloot

Meet the electric life forms that live on pure energy - 3 views

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    Unlike any other living thing on Earth, electric bacteria use energy in its purest form - naked electricity in the shape of electrons harvested from rocks and metals. We already knew about two types, Shewanella and Geobacter. Now, biologists are showing that they can entice many more out of rocks and marine mud by tempting them with a bit of electrical juice. Experiments growing bacteria on battery electrodes demonstrate that these novel, mind-boggling forms of life are essentially eating and excreting electricity.
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