Siberia heat 'almost impossible' without climate change
A heatwave in Siberia that saw temperature records tumble as the region sweltered in 38-degree Celsius highs was "almost impossible" without the influence of manmade climate change, leading scientists said.
An international team of researchers found that the record-breaking warm period was more than 2C hotter than it would have been if humans had not warmed the planet through decades of greenhouse gas emissions.
This is further evidence of the extreme temperatures we can expect to see more frequently around the world in a warming climate.
Immunity toCOVID-19may not last. This threatens a vaccine and herd immunity
Animportant new studyreleased online this week could have a large bearing on how our future looks in 2021 and beyond.
It suggests our immunity to SARS-CoV-2 does not last very long at all — as little as two months for some people. If this is the case, it means a potential vaccine might require regular boosters, and herd immunity might not be viable at all.
An international team of scientists has found that instead of lithium (Li), sodium (Na) "stacked" in a special way can be used for battery production. Sodium batteries would be significantly cheaper and equivalently or even more capacious than existing lithium batteries.
Scientists achieve major breakthrough in preserving integrity of sound waves
In a breakthrough for physics and engineering, researchers have presented the first demonstration of topological order based on time modulations. This advancement allows the researchers to propagate sound waves along the boundaries of topological metamaterials without the risk of waves traveling backwards or being thwarted by material defects.
Sperm discovery reveals clue to genetic 'immortality'
New insights into an elusive process that protects developing sperm cells from damage in growing embryos, sheds light on how genetic information passes down, uninterrupted, through generations.
The study identified a protein, known as SPOCD1, which plays a key role in protecting the early-stage precursors to sperm, known asgerm cells, from damage in a developing embryo.
During their development, germ cells undergo a reprogramming process that leaves them vulnerable to rogue genes, known as jumping genes, which can damage their DNA and lead to infertility.
Reprogramming is essential for correct germ cell development in embryos, but leaves them temporarily vulnerable to a subset their own genes, known as jumping genes, that threaten genetic chaos.
Evading such damage allows germ cells to become the pool of self-renewing cells that produce healthy sperm throughout adult life.
Germ cells are the vital link between generations but they need unique strategies to protect the genetic information they carry, so it can be passed successfully from parents to their offspring.
The study is the first to reveal the role of the SPOCD1 protein, which helps to recruit protective chemical tags, known as DNA methylations, to disable jumping genes.
Scientists have long puzzled over howgermcellsescape damage during thereprogramming process, as it temporarily wipes their genetic slate clean of existing protective tags.
"The identification of SPOCD1 finally opens the doors to further investigation that will give a more elaborate understanding of this elusive process and male fertility.
Tests in male mice revealed that loss of this protein leads to infertility because the DNA methylation process does not happen correctly, allowing jumping genes to damage the developing sperms' DNA.
Jumping genes make up over half of our DNA and move around the genome controlling how our genes are used. But their activity needs to be carefully regulated to avoid them causing damage.
The team discovered that early sperm's secret line of defence is activated when SPOCD1 binds with another protein, known as MIWI2, which is already known to have a role in silencing jumping genes.
Previous studies revealed that MIWI2 protein is bound to small molecules, known as piRNAs, that play a key role in disabling jumping genesthrough DNA methylation.
Ansgar Zoch et al. SPOCD1 is an essential executor of piRNA-directed de novo DNA methylation, Nature (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2557-5
Tiny, needle-like fibers that can become airborne if bedrock is disturbed during earthworks has the potential to cause asbestos-type disease and should be investigated, scientists say.
A new facility will store tens of thousands of cryogenically-frozen people. The hope is to one day bring them back to life, but just how realistic are its aims?
Study reveals strange magnetic behaviour 8-11 million years ago
Research has revealed that strange behaviour of the magnetic field in the South Atlantic region existed as far back as eight to 11 million years ago, suggesting that today's South Atlantic Anomaly is a recurring feature and unlikely to represent an impending reversal of the Earth's magnetic field.
The South Atlantic Anomaly is an area characterized by a significant reduction in the strength of Earth's magnetic field compared with areas at similar geographic latitudes. Here, protection from harmful radiation from space is reduced. The most significant signs of this are technical malfunctions aboard satellites and spacecraft.
The geomagnetic records from the rocks covering 34 different volcanic eruptions that took place between eight and 11 million years ago revealed that at these occurrences the direction of the magnetic field for St Helena often pointed far from the North pole, just like it does today.
The Earth's magnetic field, or the geomagnetic field, not only gives us the ability of navigating with a compass, but also protects our atmosphere from charged particles coming from the sun, called solar wind. However, it is not completely stable in strength and direction, both over time and space, and it has the ability to completely flip or reverse itself with substantial implications.
The South Atlantic Anomaly is a topic of debate between scientists in this field. Besides the fact that it causes damages to space technology, it also raises the question of where it comes from and whether it represents the start of the total weakening of the field and a possible upcoming pole reversal.
study provides the first long term analysis of the magnetic field in this region dating back millions of years. It reveals that theanomalyin the magnetic field in the South Atlantic is not a one-off, similar anomalies existed eight to 11 million years ago.
"This is the first time that the irregular behaviour of the geomagnetic field in the South Atlantic region has been shown on such a long timescale. It suggests that the South Atlantic Anomaly is a recurring feature and probably not a sign of an impending reversal.
"It also supports earlier studies that hint towards a link between the South Atlantic Anomaly and anomalous seismic features in the lowermost mantle and the outer core. This brings us closer to linking behaviour of the geomagnetic field directly to features of the Earth's interior"
Elevated paleomagnetic dispersion at Saint Helena suggests long-lived anomalous behavior in the South Atlantic, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2020). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2001217117
Using drones to reduce disease-spreading mosquito populations
Vector-borne diseases are illnesses that can be transmitted to humans by blood-feeding insects, such as mosquitoes, ticks and fleas. Mosquitoes are known to contribute to the spread of a number of vector-borne diseases, including malaria, dengue, yellow fever and Zika.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), this class of diseases accounts for 17% of all infectious diseases in the world, causing over 1 million human deaths per year. Developing methods to reduce the spread and prevalence of these diseases is thus of utmost importance, as it could ultimately save countless human lives.
In recent years, scientists have devised a number of control methods to reduce or manage harmful insect populations without injecting harmful chemicals into the environment. One of these methods is the sterile insect technique(SIT), a form of insect birth control that entails the use of radiation to sterilize male mosquitoes, which are then released into the air in a target area and start mating with wild female insects.
As a sterile male and a fertile female do not produce any offspring after they mate, SIT produces a decline in the insect population. In order to reduce the incidence of vector-borne diseases, however, large amounts of good quality sterile insects need to be released continuously over affected geographical areas. Techniques for the cost-effective aerial release of sterile mosquitoes over extended geographical regions are thus a bottleneck to enabling the application of SIT on a large scale.
Researchers have recently developed a system to apply the SIT using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, to manage and reduce vector-borne-disease-transmitting mosquito populations. This unique system entails the release of sterile mosquitoes in the air over large geographical areas using UAVs or drones. The system, tested in Brazil, enabled a uniform dispersal of sterile male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes while maintaining their quality, leading to a consistent sterile-to-wild male ratio.
The key goal of the study was to measure the survival, dispersal and sexual competitiveness of sterile male mosquitoes after they were mass-produced, sorted, handled, irradiated, marked and released within a geographical area using UAVs. The UAV-based release system they devised uses a canister in which mosquitoes are chilled down to 8-12 °C and compacted. Each canister can contain up to 50,000 sterile males. When the canister opens, the mosquitoes fall into a rotating cylinder that releases them into the open air with each of its rotations. The rotation speed controls the number of sterile males released per minute. It is fully automated, and release rates can be controlled depending on the location and speed of the drone.
J. Bouyer et al. Field performance of sterile male mosquitoes released from an uncrewed aerial vehicle, Science Robotics (2020). DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.aba6251
Oh No, Salmonella Has Found a Way to Avoid Being Washed Off Our Salads
Some Salmonella bacteria strains have found a way of evading plant defences and sneaking their way into leafy greens – a strategy that's effective enough to protect them against plant immune systems and from being washed off in the kitchen.
Could COVID-19 Trigger Chronic Disease in Some People?
A handful of viruses have been associated with long-term, debilitating symptoms in a subset of those who become infected. Early signs hint that SARS-CoV-2 may do the same.
Inventory of the human gut ecosystem: An international team of scientists has collated all known bacterial genomes from the human gut microbiome into a single large database, allowing researchers to explore the links between bacterial genes and proteins, and their effects on human health.
Chronic inflammation alters the evolution of cells in the colon, study finds: researchers have compared diseased colon with healthy tissue to better understand how inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is linked to an increased risk of colorectal cancers, at a molecular level.
New model proposed to reduce carbon footprint: to bring the carbon footprint of international conferences down. The model can apply to small regional conferences as well. The model identifies three key areas for action; carefully selecting venues to minimize transport emissions, hosting conferences every second year to instantly cut travel by 50%, and creating hubs so people travel shorter distances to still benefit from networking while linking virtually to other hubs.
Genomic basis of bat superpowers revealed: Like how they survive deadly viruses
The genetic material that codes for bat adaptations and superpowers—such as the ability to fly, to use sound to move effortlessly in complete darkness, to tolerate and survive potentially deadly viruses, and to resist aging and cancer—has been revealed and published.
One aspect of the paper findings shows evolution through gene expansion and loss in a family of genes, APOBEC3, which is known to play an important role in immunity to viruses in other mammals. The details in the paper that explain this evolution set the groundwork for investigating how these genetic changes, found in bats but not in other mammals, could help prevent the worst outcomes of viral diseases in other mammals, including humans.
The team compared these bat genomes against 42 other mammals to address the unresolved question of where bats are located within the mammalian tree of life. Using novel phylogenetic methods and comprehensive molecular data sets, the team found the strongest support for bats being most closely related to a group called Fereuungulata that consists of carnivorans (which includes dogs, cats and seals, among other species), pangolins, whales and ungulates (hooved mammals).
To uncover genomic changes that contribute to the unique adaptations found in bats, the team systematically searched for gene differences between bats and other mammals, identifying regions of the genomethat have evolved differently in bats and the loss and gain of genes that may drive bats' unique traits
The researchers found evidence the exquisite genomes revealed "fossilized viruses," evidence of surviving past viral infections, and showed that bat genomes contained a higher diversity of these viral remnants than other species providing a genomic record of ancient historical interaction with viral infections. The genomes also revealed the signatures of many other genetic elements besides ancient viral insertions, including 'jumping genes' or transposable elements.
A team of researchers has succeeded in diffracting a beam of organic molecules. In their paper published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the researchers describe demonstrating Bragg diffraction of the molecules ciprofloxacin and phthalocyanine.
Over the long history of wave-particle research, scientists have found that light is both a wave and a particle. They have also shown that electrons have a similar wave-particle duality. Physicists theorize that wave-particle duality is a fundamental feature of the universe. This suggests that all matter should have wave-like phenomena, which means that it should be able to behave in ways that are similar to light and electrons. As one example, it should be possible to demonstrate interference and diffraction of matter, such as whole molecules. In this new effort, the researchers have done exactly that by demonstrating a type of diffraction pattern with molecules of ciprofloxacin (an antibiotic) and phthalocyanine (a kind of dye).
The work involved firing a laser beam at a sheet of glass upon which the ciprofloxacin and phthalocyanine molecules were applied, forcing them to fly off the glass at a very rapid speed. The molecules flew toward a barrier with a vertical slit that allowed only those molecules traveling in the desired direction to pass through. Those that passed through were met by another laser beam focused with a standing wave pattern. The high-intensity parts of the beam deflected the molecules in a way akin to passing through a gap, which led to the creation of a diffraction pattern. The molecules were then directed through another slit and immediately thereafter impacted a flat screen, where they adhered. And because the types of molecules the researchers chose for the experiment glow when exposed to UV or blue light, the researchers were able to see them. By running the experiment for a short period of time, the researchers were able to observe a pattern appear on the screen—evidence of a diffraction pattern.
The researchers were able to create different patterns by using different initial laser velocities and different incident angles. They note also that the patterns were weak, though still observable, and agreed with theory.
Evidence of "hormone disruptor" chemical threats grows
A growing number of chemicals in pesticides, flame retardants, and certain plastics have been linked to widespread health problems including infertility, diabetes, and impaired brain development, a set of reviews of hundreds of studies concludes.
Quantum Tunneling Is Not Instantaneous, Physicists Show
A new experiment tracks the transit time of particles burrowing through barriers, revealing previously unknown details of a deeply counterintuitive phenomenon
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** New research identifies the rules that termites use to build their nests
The popular view of biometric security often invokes fingerprint readers, iris or retinal scans, and voice-activated systems. However, any unique human characteristic whether the shape of one's ears, the whole face, the pattern of blood vessels in the back of the hand, walking pattern, heart rhythm or even how one types at a keyboard, might be used to provide a secure signature of login. Some traits are easier to analyze than others and some, such as fingerprints, can be spoofed.
Research published in the International Journal of Biometrics has taken an amusing trait to demonstrate how the way a person laughs might be used in biometrics.
people can recognize other people by the unique nature of their laughter, perhaps in an even more obvious way than their voice. Moreover, while many people are adept at impersonating the voices of other people, mimicking someone's laugh is far more difficult. The team has now used statistical analyses of the various audible frequencies present in a person's laugh to create adigital signaturefor each uniquelaugh.
Tests on the approach show their prototype recognition algorithm to be 90 percent accurate, which compares very favorably with the 65% accuracy of a conventional Gaussian model. However, combining their algorithm with the Gaussian approach can boost accuracy overall by more than 5 percent.
Comfort Oluwaseyi Folorunso et al. Laughter signature: a novel biometric trait for person identification, International Journal of Biometrics (2020). DOI: 10.1504/IJBM.2020.108480
estimate that more than 100 million lighting strikes on land each year will radically alter forests and other ecosystems in the region between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn.
How mosquitoes got their taste for human blood and what it means for the future
Of about 3,500 mosquito species around the world, only a few have taken to specifically targeting people for biting, making them important spreaders of infectious diseases. To predict and help control the spread of those mosquito-borne illnesses, it's important to know where and why, evolutionarily speaking, certain mosquitoes got their taste for biting humans in the first place. Now, researchers reporting in the journal Current Biology on July 23 have identified two major factors: a dry climate and city life. Based on these findings, they predict that increased urbanization in the coming decades will mean even more human-biting mosquitoes in the future. They
found that in their native range of sub-Saharan Africa, they show extremely variable attraction to human hosts, ranging from strong preference for humans to strong preference for non-human animals."
"Mosquitoes living near dense human populations in cities such as Kumasi, Ghana, or Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, showed increased willingness to bite human hosts," adds Noah Rose, also of Princeton. "But they only evolve a strong preference for human hosts in places with intense dry seasons—in particular, in the Sahel region, where rainfall is concentrated in just a couple months out of the year. We think this is because mosquitoes in these climates are especially dependent on humans and human water storage for their life cycle."
Noah H. Rose et al, Climate and Urbanization Drive Mosquito Preference for Humans, Current Biology (2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.092
Worryingly, research from space flight missions has shown bacteria become more deadly and resilient when exposed to microgravity (when only tiny gravitational forces are present).
Adding to that, bacteria also seem tomutate quickerin space. However, these mutations are predominately for the bacteria toadapt to the new environment– not to become super deadly.
More research is needed to examine whether such adaptations do, in fact, allow the bacteria to cause more disease.
L-type calcium channel blockers may contribute to heart failure, study finds
L-type calcium channel blockers (LCCBs)—the most widely used drugs for treating hypertension—may harm the heart as much as help it, according to a new study.
Coronavirus makes changes that cause cells not to recognize it
With an alarm code, we can enter a building without bells going off. It turns out that the SARS coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has the same advantage entering cells. It possesses the code to waltz right in.
How can the coronavirus achieves this?
The scientists resolved the structure of an enzyme called nsp16, which the virus produces and then uses to modify its messenger RNA cap. It's a camouflage. Because of the modifications, which fool the cell, the resulting viral messenger RNA is now considered as part of the cell's own code and not foreign.
How do scientists overcome this?
Deciphering the 3-D structure of nsp16 paves the way for rational design of antiviral drugs for COVID-19 and other emerging coronavirus infections. The drugs, new small molecules, would inhibit nsp16 from making the modifications. The immune system would then pounce on the invading virus, recognizing it as foreign.
Neanderthal gene linked to increased pain sensitivity
People who have inherited nerve-altering mutations from the ancient hominins tend to experience more pain.
Despite their rough and tumble existence, Neanderthals had a biological predisposition to a heightened sense of pain, finds a first-of-its kind genome study published in Current Biology on 23 July . Evolutionary geneticists found that the ancient human relatives carried three mutations in a gene encoding the protein NaV1.7, which conveys painful sensations to the spinal cord and brain. They also showed that in a sample of British people, those who had inherited the Neanderthal version of NaV1.7 tend to experience more pain than others.
Mutations in a gene called SCN9A — which encodes the NaV1.7 protein — stood out because all of the Neanderthals had three mutations that alter the shape of the protein. The mutated version of the gene was found on both sets of chromosomes in all three Neanderthals, hinting that it was common across their populations.NaV1.7 acts in the body’s nerves, where it is involved in controlling whether and to what extent painful signals are transmitted to the spinal cord and brain. “People have described it as a volume knob, setting the gain of the pain in nerve fibres,” says Zeberg. Some people with extremely rare genetic mutations that disable the protein do not feel pain, whereas other changes can predispose people to chronic pain.
Quantum Tunneling Is Not Instantaneous, Physicists Show
A new experiment tracks the transit time of particles burrowing through barriers, revealing previously unknown details of a deeply counterintuitive phenomenon
In cell studies, seaweed extract outperforms remdesivir in blocking COVID-19 virus
Heparin, a common anitcoagulent, could also form basis of a viral trap for SARS-CoV-2
In a test of antiviral effectiveness against the virus that causes COVID-19, an extract from edible seaweeds substantially outperformed remdesivir, the current standard antiviral used to combat the disease.
To get an idea of how much this might happen, a simple test involving trying to blow out a candle directly in front of the wearer could be tried. Initially, the distance coupled with the strength of exhalation could be investigated, but then face coverings made from different materials and critically with different numbers of layers could be tried. The design of face covering that made it hardest to divert the candle flame will probably provide the best barrier for projecting the virus forward and through the face covering.
Meta-Research: The growth of acronyms in the scientific literature
Abstract
Some acronyms are useful and are widely understood, but many of the acronyms used in scientific papers hinder understanding and contribute to the increasing fragmentation of science. Here we report the results of an analysis of more than 24 million article titles and 18 million article abstracts published between 1950 and 2019. There was at least one acronym in 19% of the titles and 73% of the abstracts. Acronym use has also increased over time, but the re-use of acronyms has declined. We found that from more than one million unique acronyms in our data, just over 2,000 (0.2%) were used regularly, and most acronyms (79%) appeared fewer than 10 times. Acronyms are not the biggest current problem in science communication, but reducing their use is a simple change that would help readers and potentially increase the value of science.
Psychologists show that embedding primes in a person's speech can influence people's decision making
psychologists found that embedding primes in a person's speech and gestures can influence people's decision-making
In both psychology and magic circles, primes are known as actions or words that unconsciously influence the thinking of another person One example is a policeman interrogating a witness tapping his ring while inquiring about jewelry a suspect might have been wearing. It is a technique magicians have used for years. They prime a person or audience by giving them subtle verbal or physical clues to get them to choose anumberduring a guessing trick, or a card during a card trick. In this new effort, the researchers tested the practice to see if it actually works.
The experiments involved asking volunteers to watch a live or taped performance of a person who, unbeknownst to them, was trying to prime them. The research began with 90 volunteers who were split into two groups. One group watched Pailhès (who is also an amateur magician) perform a live magic act—the other group watched a video version of the same act on a laptop. The act consisted of attempting to get thecrowdof observers to pick a predesignated card—the three ofdiamonds.
As part of the routine, she mimicked an act by British illusionist Derren Brown in which he asks a member of the crowd to mentally transmit the correct card to the others in the crowd. He also asks the crowd to think about a bright, vivid colored card (more descriptive of a red card than a black one). He also mimes the shape of a diamond with his hands and asks the audience to think of the little numbers at the corners (ruling out double digits and face cards) and even draws the number "3" in the air with his hands—and asks the audience to imagine things in the middle as he says, "boom, boom, boom."
After mimicking this act, the researchers asked the audience members to write down a card by suit and number, which they turned in. Inspection of the cards showed that 17.8 percent of theaudiencemembers chose the three of diamonds—38.9 percent chose a three of any suit and 33.3 percent chose a diamond of any number, results that were far better than chance.
Alice Pailhès et al. Influencing choices with conversational primes: How a magic trick unconsciously influences card choices, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2020). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2000682117
Researchers create 'decoy' coatings that trick infrared cameras
Light can sometimes play tricks on our eyes. If you look at a shiny surface, what you see will largely depend on the surrounding environment and lighting conditions.
Researchers have now taken ocular distortion a step further, finding a way to imbed visual "decoys" into surfaces of objects in a way that can fool people into thinking they detect a specific image in the infrared that actually isn't there.
Infrared light is invisible to the human eye, but can be detected by a range of devices, such as night-vision goggles and thermal-imaging cameras. In this work,researchers can effectively tune target objects into emitting the same infrared radiation as the surrounding environment, making them invisible to infrared detection devices.
But what makes the researchers' work particularly novel is that they can manipulate the coatings in a way that a person trying to view the object with such a device would instead see a false image.
"This structure offers a general platform for unprecedented manipulation and processing of infrared signals.
this method provides better, more consistent camouflage because the product is mechanically flexible, power free and inherently self-adaptive to temporal fluctuation as well as spatial variation of the targettemperature.
Additionally, by manipulating the configuration and composition of tungsten-dopedvanadium dioxideon coatings applied to the PE tape, researchers can create an infrared decoy.
"How we grow the material changes the image people ultimately think they see.
This kind of technology could prove useful for military and intelligence agencies, as they seek to thwart increasingly sophisticated surveillance technologies that pose a threat to national security. It might also incubate future encryption technology, allowing information to be safely concealed from unauthorized access.
Kechao Tang et al. A Thermal Radiation Modulation Platform by Emissivity Engineering with Graded Metal–Insulator Transition, Advanced Materials (2020). DOI: 10.1002/adma.201907071
Testing Chernobyl fungi as a radiation shield for astronauts
How can astronauts survive high radiations during interplanetary travel?
A team of researchers has tested the viability of using a type of fungus found growing in some of the destroyed nuclear reactors at the former Chernobyl nuclear power plant site to shield astronauts from radiation.
Some fungi are able to flourish in a very highly radioactive place here on Earth—inside the destroyed reactors at the Chernobyl site in Ukraine. Testing of several types of the fungi has showed that they not only survive in the former reactors, but actually flourish. They have the ability to absorb radiation and to convert it into energy for their own use. To look into the possibility of using such types of fungus as a shield for humans, the researchers arranged with NASA to send a sample of one of the types of fungus found at Chernobyl—cladosporium sphaerospermum—to the International Space Station.
Once the fungus sample arrived at the ISS, astronauts monitored the petri dish set up by the researchers. One side of the petri dish was coated with the fungus; the other side had no fungus and served as a control. A detector was affixed to the back of the petri dish to measure radiation coming through. The detector was monitored for 30 days. The researchers found that the side of the petri dish that was covered with fungus reduced radiation levels coming through the dish by approximately 2% compared to the control side. That alone is inadequate as a safety shield, but the experiment serves as an indicator of what might be possible. On its own, the fungus is known to grow, which means a rocket carrying humans could carry just a small amount with them. Once on Mars, the fungus could be cultivated on a shield structure and allowed to thicken, offering perhaps one layer of protection very nearly free of charge.
Graham K. Shunk et al. A Self-Replicating Radiation-Shield for Human Deep-Space Exploration: Radiotrophic Fungi can Attenuate Ionizing Radiation aboard the International Space Station, bioRxiv (2020). DOI: 10.1101/2020.07.16.205534
A scientist's mesmerizing animation shows how our entire solar system orbits an unseen center — and it's not the sun
A scientist's mesmerizing animation shows how our entire solar system orbits an unseen center — and it's not the sun: That center of mass is called the barycenter
New study reveals how day- and night-biting mosquitoes respond differently to colours of light and time of day
Researchers found that night- versus day-biting species of mosquitoes are behaviorally attracted and repelled by different colors of light at different times of day. Mosquitoes are among major disease vectors impacting humans and animals around the world and the findings have important implications for using light to control them.
The team studied mosquito species that bite in the daytime (Aedes aegypti, aka the Yellow Fever mosquito) and those that bite at night (Anopheles coluzzi, a member of the Anopheles gambiae family, the major vector for malaria). They found distinct responses to ultra violet and other colors of light between the two species. Researchers also found light preference is dependent on the mosquito's sex and species, the time of day and the colour of the light.
Insects are non-specifically attracted to ultraviolet light, hence the widespread use of ultraviolet light "bug zappers" for insect control. this research found that day-biting mosquitoes are attracted to a wide range of light spectra during the daytime, whereas night-biting mosquitoes are strongly photophobic to short-wavelength light during the daytime. Therefore, timing and light spectra are critical for species-specific light control of harmful mosquitoes.
The new work shows that day-biting mosquitoes, particularly females that require blood meals for their fertilized eggs, are attracted to light during the day regardless of spectra. In contrast, night-biting mosquitoes specifically avoid ultraviolet (UV) and blue light during the day. Previous work using fruit flies(which are related to mosquitoes) has determined the light sensors and circadian molecular mechanisms for light mediated attraction/avoidance behaviours. Accordingly, molecular disruption of the circadian clock severely interferes with light-evoked attraction and avoidance behaviours in mosquitoes. At present, light-based insect controls do not take into consideration the day versus night behavioural profiles that change with daily light and dark cycles.
Light is the primary regulator of circadian rhythms and evokes a wide range of time-of-day specific behaviours. By gaining an understanding of how insects respond to short wavelength lightin a species-specific manner, we can develop new, environmentally friendly alternatives to controlling harmful insects more effectively and reduce the need for environmentally damaging toxic pesticides.
Lisa S. Baik et al, Circadian Regulation of Light-Evoked Attraction and Avoidance Behaviors in Daytime- versus Nighttime-Biting Mosquitoes, Current Biology (2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.010
Discovery will allow more sophisticated work at nanoscale
The movement of fluids through small capillaries and channels is crucial for processes ranging from blood flow through the brain to power generation and electronic cooling systems, but that movement often stops when the channel is smaller than 10 nanometers.
Researchers have reported a new understanding of the process and why some fluids stagnate in these tiny channels, as well as a new way to stimulate the fluid flow by using a small increase in temperature or voltage to promote mass and ion transport.
The work explores the movement of fluids with lower surface tension, which allows the bonds between molecules to break apart when forced into narrow channels, stopping the process of fluid transport, known as capillary wicking.
This capillary force drives liquid flow in small channels and is the critical mechanism for mass transport in nature and technology—that is, in situations ranging from blood flow in the human brain to the movement of water and nutrients from soil to plant roots and leaves, as well as in industrial processes.
But differences in the surface tension of some fluids causes the wicking process—and therefore, the movement of the fluid—to stop when those channels are smaller than 10 nanometers. The researchers reported that it is possible to prompt continued flow by manipulating the surface tension through small stimuli, such as raising the temperature or using a small amount of voltage.
The temperature even slightly can activate movement by changing surface tension, which they dubbed "nanogates." Depending on the liquid, raising the temperature between 2 degrees Centigrade and 3 degrees C is enough to mobilize the fluid.The surface tension can be changed through different variables.
The simplest one is temperature. If you change temperature of the fluid, you can activate this fluid flow again." The process can be fine-tuned to move the fluid, or just specific ions within it, offering promise for more sophisticated work at nanoscale.
Researchers have for the first time measured a fundamental property of magnets called magnon polarization—and in the process, are making progress towards building low-energy devices.
CERN experiment reports first evidence for ultra-rare process that could lead to new physics
Scientists at CERN have reported on their first significant evidence for a process predicted by theory, paving the way for searches for evidence of new physics in particle processes that could explain dark matter and other mysteries of the universe.
the first significant experimental evidence for the ultra-rare decay of the charged kaon into a charged pion and two neutrinos, (i.e. K+→ π+νν).
The decay process is important in cutting-edge physics research because it is so sensitive to deviations from theoretical predictions. This means that it is one of the most interesting things to observe for physicists looking for evidence to supports alternative theoreticalmodelinparticle physics.
Scientists reveal an explosive secret hidden beneath seemingly trustworthy volcanoes
An international team of volcanologists working on remote islands in the Galápagos Archipelago has found that volcanoes which reliably produce small basaltic lava eruptions hide chemically diverse magmas in their underground plumbing systems—including some with the potential to generate explosive activity.
Gold nanosensor spots difference between dengue, Zika
A new class of nanosensor developed in Brazil could more accurately identify dengue and Zika infections, a task that is complicated by their genetic similarities and which can result in misdiagnosis. The technique uses gold nanoparticles and can "observe" viruses at the atomic level.
Dengue is a disease that kills—and can do so quickly if the right diagnosis is not made. As for Zika, it offers risks for fetuses to develop microcephaly, and we can't let pregnant women spend seven or eight months wondering whether they have the virus or not
Belonging to the Flavivirus genus in the Flaviviridae family, Zika and dengue viruses share more than 50 percent similarity in their amino acid sequence. Both viruses are spread by mosquitos and can have long-term side effects. The Flaviviridae virus family was named after the yellow fever virus and comes from the Latin word for golden, or yellow, in color.
Diagnosing dengue virus infections is a high priority in countries affected by annual epidemics of dengue fever. The correct diagnostic is essential for patient managing and prognostic as there are no specific antiviral drugs to treat the infection.
It is almost impossible to differentiate between dengue and Zika viruses.
A serologic testthat detects antibodies against dengue also captures Zika-generated antibodies. Scientists call this 'cross-reactivity'.
There is also no specific antiviral treatment for Zika and the search for a vaccine is ongoing.
Virus differentiation is important to accurately measure the real impact of both diseases on public health. The most widely used blood test, the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), is limited in its ability to tell the difference between the viruses.
As dengue has four variations, known as serotypes, the team created four different nanoparticles and covered each of them with a different dengue protein. They applied ELISA serum and a blood sample. The researchers found that sample antibodies bound with the viruses' proteins, changing the pattern of electrons on the gold nanoparticle surface.
The researchers could see this change by applying certain frequencies of light on the nanoparticle's surface. Dengue proteins absorbed light—Zika ones did not.
The study argues that the gold nanoparticle-based test is more precise than other blood antibody tests because of its high sensitivity and capacity to identify which virus has been detected. The fact that this test doesn't require reagents and uses ELISA equipment, which is widely available and low cost.
Alice F. Versiani et al. Nanosensors based on LSPR are able to serologically differentiate dengue from Zika infections, Scientific Reports (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-68357-9
Simulating quantum 'time travel' disproves butterfly effect in quantum realm
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Microbes revived after 100 million years
Scientists have managed to wake up microbes that have been buried deep beneath the sea floor — apparently in a dormant state — since dinosaurs walked on Earth
Meta-Research: International authorship and collaboration across bioRxiv preprints
Preprints are becoming well established in the life sciences, but relatively little is known about the demographics of the researchers who post preprints and those who do not, or about the collaborations between preprint authors. Here, based on an analysis of 67,885 preprints posted on bioRxiv, it was found that some countries, notably the United States and the United Kingdom, are overrepresented on bioRxiv relative to their overall scientific output, while other countries (including China, Russia, and Turkey) show lower levels of bioRxiv adoption. This research also describes a set of ‘contributor countries’ (including Uganda, Croatia and Thailand): researchers from these countries appear almost exclusively as non-senior authors on international collaborations. They also found multiple journals that publish a disproportionate number of preprints from some countries, a dynamic that almost always benefits manuscripts from the US.
‘Keystone’ Species Key To Rebuilding Gut Microbiota After Antibiotics The discovery of gut bacteria critical to restoring gut health offers new insights into microbiome recovery after antibiotic treatment.
Some Uninfected People Have T-Cell Immunity To COVID-19 Researchers were surprised to find memory T-cells in people with no history of SARS, COVID-19, or contact with SARS or COVID-19 patients.
Fear conditioning: Transcranial stimulation to prevent fear memories from returning
A research group from the University of Bologna has succeeded in modifying the negative effect of a returning memory that triggers fear, and developed a new non-invasive experimental protocol. The result of this study, published in the journal Current Biology, is an innovative protocol that combines fear conditioning—a stimulus associated with something unpleasant that induces a negative memory—and the neurostimulation of a specific site of the prefrontal cortex.
This process alters the perception of an unpleasant (aversive) event so that it will no longer induce fear. "This experimental protocol combining transcranial stimulation and memory reconsolidation allowed us to modify an aversive memory that the participants had learned the day before," explains Sara Borgomaneri, a researcher at the University of Bologna and first author of the study. "This result has relevant repercussions for understanding how memory works. It might even lead to the development of new therapies to deal with traumatic memories."
Borgomaneri et al., State-dependent TMS over prefrontal cortex disrupts fear memory reconsolidation and prevents the return of fear. Current Biology, (2020).
Cosmic tango between the very small and the very large
While Einstein's theory of general relativity can explain a large array of fascinating astrophysical and cosmological phenomena, some aspects of the properties of the universe at the largest-scales remain a mystery. A new study using loop quantum cosmology—a theory that uses quantum mechanics to extend gravitational physics beyond Einstein's theory of general relativity—accounts for two major mysteries. While the differences in the theories occur at the tiniest of scales—much smaller than even a proton—they have consequences at the largest of accessible scales in the universe. The study, which appears online July 29 in the journal Physical Review Letters, also provides new predictions about the universe that future satellite missions could test.
While a zoomed-out picture of theuniverselooks fairly uniform, it does have a large-scale structure, for example because galaxies and dark matter are not uniformly distributed throughout the universe. The origin of this structure has been traced back to the tiny inhomogeneities observed in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)—radiation that was emitted when the universe was 380 thousand years young that we can still see today. But the CMB itself has three puzzling features that are considered anomalies because they are difficult to explain using known physics.
"While seeing one of these anomalies may not be that statistically remarkable, seeing two or more together suggests we live in an exceptional universe.
A recent study in the journal Nature Astronomy proposed an explanation for one of these anomalies that raised so many additional concerns, they flagged a 'possible crisis in cosmology.' Using quantum loop cosmology, however, we have resolved two of these anomalies naturally, avoiding that potential crisis."
Research over the last three decades has greatly improved our understanding of the early universe, including how the inhomogeneities in the CMB were produced in the first place. These inhomogeneities are a result of inevitable quantum fluctuations in the early universe. During a highly accelerated phase of expansion at very early times—known as inflation—these primordial, miniscule fluctuations were stretched under gravity's influence and seeded the observed inhomogeneities in the CMB.
Abhay Ashtekar et al, Alleviating the Tension in the Cosmic Microwave Background using Planck-Scale Physics, Physical Review Letters (2020). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.051302
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Study reveals how a dangerous parasite controls its host cell to spread around the body
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-reveals-dangerous-parasite-host-cell....
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-dietary-guidelines-compatible-global-...
Most dietary guidelines are not compatible with global health and environmental targets
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-galaxies-die-insights-quenching-star....
How galaxies die: New insights into the quenching of star formation
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-astronomers-black-hole-corona-reappea...
In a first, astronomers watch a black hole's corona disappear, then reappear
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https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-07/ou-ppr071420.php
In a random crossover trial, researchers were able to reduce phantom-limb pain after only three days of training with a brain-computer-interface
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https://www.sciencealert.com/some-masks-are-better-than-others-here...
The Best And Worst Face Masks For COVID-19, Ranked by Their Level of Protection
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Identified: Molecular Predictors of Rheumatoid Arthritis Relapse
The presence of a particular set of RNAs in the blood forewarns of an onset of severe symptoms and points to the cells involved.
https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/identified-molecular-pre...
Jul 17, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Siberia heat 'almost impossible' without climate change
A heatwave in Siberia that saw temperature records tumble as the region sweltered in 38-degree Celsius highs was "almost impossible" without the influence of manmade climate change, leading scientists said.
An international team of researchers found that the record-breaking warm period was more than 2C hotter than it would have been if humans had not warmed the planet through decades of greenhouse gas emissions.
This is further evidence of the extreme temperatures we can expect to see more frequently around the world in a warming climate.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-siberia-impossible-climate.html?utm_s...
Jul 17, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Immunity to COVID-19 may not last. This threatens a vaccine and herd immunity
An important new study released online this week could have a large bearing on how our future looks in 2021 and beyond.
It suggests our immunity to SARS-CoV-2 does not last very long at all — as little as two months for some people. If this is the case, it means a potential vaccine might require regular boosters, and herd immunity might not be viable at all.
https://theconversation.com/immunity-to-covid-19-may-not-last-this-...
Jul 17, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Replacing lithium with sodium in batteries
An international team of scientists has found that instead of lithium (Li), sodium (Na) "stacked" in a special way can be used for battery production. Sodium batteries would be significantly cheaper and equivalently or even more capacious than existing lithium batteries.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-lithium-sodium-batteries.html?utm_sou...
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Scientists achieve major breakthrough in preserving integrity of sound waves
In a breakthrough for physics and engineering, researchers have presented the first demonstration of topological order based on time modulations. This advancement allows the researchers to propagate sound waves along the boundaries of topological metamaterials without the risk of waves traveling backwards or being thwarted by material defects.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-major-breakthrough.html?ut...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-power-toxic-dominance-groups.html?utm...
Dominance reduces influence in groups
dominant individuals can influence a group through force, but passive individuals are far better at bringing a group to consensus.
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-chemical-thermometers-temperature-nan...
Chemical thermometers take temperature to the nanometric scale
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-uncover-atomic-epstein-bar...
Scientists uncover first atomic structure of Epstein-Bar virus nucleocapsid
Jul 18, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
'Erasing' drug-associated memories may help prevent addiction relapse
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-erasing-drug-associated-memo...
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Blood test detects positive COVID-19 result in 20 minutes
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-blood-positive-covid-result-...
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Atomtronic device could probe boundary between quantum, everyday worlds
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-atomtronic-device-probe-boundary-quan...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-hairpin-vortices-supersonic-turbulenc...
Study confirms hairpin vortices in supersonic turbulence
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**Measuring drug-induced molecular changes within a cell at sub-wavelength scale
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-drug-induced-molecular-cell-sub-wavel...
Jul 18, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Sperm discovery reveals clue to genetic 'immortality'
New insights into an elusive process that protects developing sperm cells from damage in growing embryos, sheds light on how genetic information passes down, uninterrupted, through generations.
The study identified a protein, known as SPOCD1, which plays a key role in protecting the early-stage precursors to sperm, known as germ cells, from damage in a developing embryo.
During their development, germ cells undergo a reprogramming process that leaves them vulnerable to rogue genes, known as jumping genes, which can damage their DNA and lead to infertility.
Reprogramming is essential for correct germ cell development in embryos, but leaves them temporarily vulnerable to a subset their own genes, known as jumping genes, that threaten genetic chaos.
Evading such damage allows germ cells to become the pool of self-renewing cells that produce healthy sperm throughout adult life.
Germ cells are the vital link between generations but they need unique strategies to protect the genetic information they carry, so it can be passed successfully from parents to their offspring.
The study is the first to reveal the role of the SPOCD1 protein, which helps to recruit protective chemical tags, known as DNA methylations, to disable jumping genes.
Scientists have long puzzled over how germ cells escape damage during the reprogramming process, as it temporarily wipes their genetic slate clean of existing protective tags.
"The identification of SPOCD1 finally opens the doors to further investigation that will give a more elaborate understanding of this elusive process and male fertility.
Tests in male mice revealed that loss of this protein leads to infertility because the DNA methylation process does not happen correctly, allowing jumping genes to damage the developing sperms' DNA.
Jumping genes make up over half of our DNA and move around the genome controlling how our genes are used. But their activity needs to be carefully regulated to avoid them causing damage.
The team discovered that early sperm's secret line of defence is activated when SPOCD1 binds with another protein, known as MIWI2, which is already known to have a role in silencing jumping genes.
Previous studies revealed that MIWI2 protein is bound to small molecules, known as piRNAs, that play a key role in disabling jumping genes through DNA methylation.
Ansgar Zoch et al. SPOCD1 is an essential executor of piRNA-directed de novo DNA methylation, Nature (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2557-5
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-sperm-discovery-reveals-clue-genetic....
Jul 18, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
New insight into the origin of water on the earth
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-insight-earth.html?utm_source=nwlette...
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Cancer-causing dust released by earthworks
Tiny, needle-like fibers that can become airborne if bedrock is disturbed during earthworks has the potential to cause asbestos-type disease and should be investigated, scientists say.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-cancer-causing-earthworks.html?utm_so...
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Enhanced water repellent surfaces discovered in nature
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-repellent-surfaces-nature.html?utm_so...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-airplanes.html?utm_source=nwletter&am...
What if airplanes could repair their own damage?
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New explosive materials to bring nontoxic ammunition
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-explosive-materials-nontoxic-ammuniti...
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https://www.sciencefocus.com/future-technology/cryonics-could-you-l...
Cryonics: Could you live forever?
A new facility will store tens of thousands of cryogenically-frozen people. The hope is to one day bring them back to life, but just how realistic are its aims?
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-chemistry-d-transition-metal-carbides...
Researchers discover new chemistry of 2-D transition metal carbides and carbonitrides
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-rainbow-pace.html?utm_source=nwletter...
A walk through the rainbow with PACE
Jul 18, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
For The First Time, Human Cartilage Has Been Engineered in Space
https://www.sciencealert.com/for-the-first-time-human-cartilage-has...
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Scientific evidence: Ancient Teeth Show 'Invasion' of Egypt 3,600 Years Ago Was No Invasion at All
https://www.sciencealert.com/archaeologists-think-the-foreign-invas...
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https://www.sciencealert.com/here-s-why-our-mind-s-eye-sees-the-wor...
Brain Scans Show Why Our Mind's Eye Sees The World So Differently to Everyday Vision
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https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-07/uoc-sss071620.php
Scientists supercharge shellfish to tackle vitamin deficiency in humans
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$$ https://phys.org/news/2020-07-dogs-earth-magnetic-field.html?utm_so...
How can lost dogs return to their homes?
Dogs may use Earth's magnetic field to navigate
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-exhaled-biomarkers-reveal-lung-diseas...
Exhaled biomarkers can reveal lung disease
Jul 18, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
What’s the difference between a scientific law and theory?
Jul 20, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Scientists achieve first complete assembly of human X chromosome
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-human-chromosome.html?utm_...
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Herd immunity: why the figure is always a bit vague
https://theconversation.com/herd-immunity-why-the-figure-is-always-...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-volcanoes-venus.html?utm_s...
Scientists discover volcanoes on Venus are still active
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Cacti and other iconic desert plants threatened by solar development
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-cacti-iconic-threatened-solar.html?ut...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-covid-viral-shutdown-protein-synthesi...
COVID-19: Viral shutdown of protein synthesis method found
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-astrophysicists-billion-years-univers...
Astrophysicists fill in 11 billion years of the universe's expansion history
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Jul 20, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Study reveals strange magnetic behaviour 8-11 million years ago
Research has revealed that strange behaviour of the magnetic field in the South Atlantic region existed as far back as eight to 11 million years ago, suggesting that today's South Atlantic Anomaly is a recurring feature and unlikely to represent an impending reversal of the Earth's magnetic field.
The South Atlantic Anomaly is an area characterized by a significant reduction in the strength of Earth's magnetic field compared with areas at similar geographic latitudes. Here, protection from harmful radiation from space is reduced. The most significant signs of this are technical malfunctions aboard satellites and spacecraft.
The geomagnetic records from the rocks covering 34 different volcanic eruptions that took place between eight and 11 million years ago revealed that at these occurrences the direction of the magnetic field for St Helena often pointed far from the North pole, just like it does today.
The Earth's magnetic field, or the geomagnetic field, not only gives us the ability of navigating with a compass, but also protects our atmosphere from charged particles coming from the sun, called solar wind. However, it is not completely stable in strength and direction, both over time and space, and it has the ability to completely flip or reverse itself with substantial implications.
The South Atlantic Anomaly is a topic of debate between scientists in this field. Besides the fact that it causes damages to space technology, it also raises the question of where it comes from and whether it represents the start of the total weakening of the field and a possible upcoming pole reversal.
study provides the first long term analysis of the magnetic field in this region dating back millions of years. It reveals that the anomaly in the magnetic field in the South Atlantic is not a one-off, similar anomalies existed eight to 11 million years ago.
"This is the first time that the irregular behaviour of the geomagnetic field in the South Atlantic region has been shown on such a long timescale. It suggests that the South Atlantic Anomaly is a recurring feature and probably not a sign of an impending reversal.
"It also supports earlier studies that hint towards a link between the South Atlantic Anomaly and anomalous seismic features in the lowermost mantle and the outer core. This brings us closer to linking behaviour of the geomagnetic field directly to features of the Earth's interior"
Elevated paleomagnetic dispersion at Saint Helena suggests long-lived anomalous behavior in the South Atlantic, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2020). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2001217117
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-reveals-strange-magnetic-behaviour-.h...
Jul 21, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Using drones to reduce disease-spreading mosquito populations
Vector-borne diseases are illnesses that can be transmitted to humans by blood-feeding insects, such as mosquitoes, ticks and fleas. Mosquitoes are known to contribute to the spread of a number of vector-borne diseases, including malaria, dengue, yellow fever and Zika.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), this class of diseases accounts for 17% of all infectious diseases in the world, causing over 1 million human deaths per year. Developing methods to reduce the spread and prevalence of these diseases is thus of utmost importance, as it could ultimately save countless human lives.
In recent years, scientists have devised a number of control methods to reduce or manage harmful insect populations without injecting harmful chemicals into the environment. One of these methods is the sterile insect technique (SIT), a form of insect birth control that entails the use of radiation to sterilize male mosquitoes, which are then released into the air in a target area and start mating with wild female insects.
As a sterile male and a fertile female do not produce any offspring after they mate, SIT produces a decline in the insect population. In order to reduce the incidence of vector-borne diseases, however, large amounts of good quality sterile insects need to be released continuously over affected geographical areas. Techniques for the cost-effective aerial release of sterile mosquitoes over extended geographical regions are thus a bottleneck to enabling the application of SIT on a large scale.
Researchers have recently developed a system to apply the SIT using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, to manage and reduce vector-borne-disease-transmitting mosquito populations. This unique system entails the release of sterile mosquitoes in the air over large geographical areas using UAVs or drones. The system, tested in Brazil, enabled a uniform dispersal of sterile male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes while maintaining their quality, leading to a consistent sterile-to-wild male ratio.
The key goal of the study was to measure the survival, dispersal and sexual competitiveness of sterile male mosquitoes after they were mass-produced, sorted, handled, irradiated, marked and released within a geographical area using UAVs. The UAV-based release system they devised uses a canister in which mosquitoes are chilled down to 8-12 °C and compacted. Each canister can contain up to 50,000 sterile males. When the canister opens, the mosquitoes fall into a rotating cylinder that releases them into the open air with each of its rotations. The rotation speed controls the number of sterile males released per minute. It is fully automated, and release rates can be controlled depending on the location and speed of the drone.
J. Bouyer et al. Field performance of sterile male mosquitoes released from an uncrewed aerial vehicle, Science Robotics (2020). DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.aba6251
https://techxplore.com/news/2020-07-drones-disease-spreading-mosqui...
Jul 21, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Poisons used to make food more beautiful, last longer
https://www.scidev.net/global/health/feature/poisons-used-to-make-f...
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Oh No, Salmonella Has Found a Way to Avoid Being Washed Off Our Salads
Some Salmonella bacteria strains have found a way of evading plant defences and sneaking their way into leafy greens – a strategy that's effective enough to protect them against plant immune systems and from being washed off in the kitchen.
https://www.sciencealert.com/salmonella-sneaks-into-plant-air-holes...
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Even People With Mild COVID-19 Symptoms Are Experiencing Long-Term Fatigue
https://www.sciencealert.com/why-are-some-people-experiencing-long-...
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https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/could-covid-19-trigger-c...
Could COVID-19 Trigger Chronic Disease in Some People?
A handful of viruses have been associated with long-term, debilitating symptoms in a subset of those who become infected. Early signs hint that SARS-CoV-2 may do the same.
Jul 21, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Interaction dynamics between designer microrobots and the immune system
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-interaction-dynamics-microro...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-unparalleled-human-gut-ecosystem.html...
Inventory of the human gut ecosystem: An international team of scientists has collated all known bacterial genomes from the human gut microbiome into a single large database, allowing researchers to explore the links between bacterial genes and proteins, and their effects on human health.
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https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-chronic-inflammation-evoluti...
Chronic inflammation alters the evolution of cells in the colon, study finds: researchers have compared diseased colon with healthy tissue to better understand how inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is linked to an increased risk of colorectal cancers, at a molecular level.
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-artificial-cells-viruses-safe.html?ut...
Artificial cells produce parts of viruses for safe studies
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-physicists-ways-gamma.html?utm_source...
Physicists find ways to control gamma radiation: by means of acoustics.
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-carbon-footprint.html?utm_source=nwle...
New model proposed to reduce carbon footprint
New model proposed to reduce carbon footprint: to bring the carbon footprint of international conferences down. The model can apply to small regional conferences as well. The model identifies three key areas for action; carefully selecting venues to minimize transport emissions, hosting conferences every second year to instantly cut travel by 50%, and creating hubs so people travel shorter distances to still benefit from networking while linking virtually to other hubs.
Jul 22, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Gamma-ray telescopes measure diameters of distant stars
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-gamma-ray-telescopes-diameters-distan...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-comprehensive-description-human-tissu...
A comprehensive description of the human tissue virome in healthy individuals
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-viruses-bacteria-gut-microbiome.html?...
How viruses and bacteria balance each other in the gut microbiome
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https://theconversation.com/what-makes-people-switch-to-reusable-cu...
What makes people switch to reusable cups? It’s not discounts, it’s what others do
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https://www.sciencealert.com/astrophysicists-unveil-biggest-ever-3d...
Scientists Just Revealed The Largest-Ever 3D Map of The Universe
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Jul 22, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Proteins—and labs—coming together to prevent Rett syndrome
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-proteinsand-labscoming-rett-syndrome....
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-chemists-tough-plastics-recyclable.ht...
Chemists make tough plastics recyclable
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Diamonds shine a light on hidden currents in graphene
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-diamonds-hidden-currents-graphene.htm...
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Mapping the brain's sensory gatekeeper
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-brain-sensory-gatekeeper.htm...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-image-multi-planet-sun-like-star.html...
First image of a multi-planet system around a sun-like star
Jul 23, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Genomic basis of bat superpowers revealed: Like how they survive deadly viruses
The genetic material that codes for bat adaptations and superpowers—such as the ability to fly, to use sound to move effortlessly in complete darkness, to tolerate and survive potentially deadly viruses, and to resist aging and cancer—has been revealed and published.
One aspect of the paper findings shows evolution through gene expansion and loss in a family of genes, APOBEC3, which is known to play an important role in immunity to viruses in other mammals. The details in the paper that explain this evolution set the groundwork for investigating how these genetic changes, found in bats but not in other mammals, could help prevent the worst outcomes of viral diseases in other mammals, including humans.
The team compared these bat genomes against 42 other mammals to address the unresolved question of where bats are located within the mammalian tree of life. Using novel phylogenetic methods and comprehensive molecular data sets, the team found the strongest support for bats being most closely related to a group called Fereuungulata that consists of carnivorans (which includes dogs, cats and seals, among other species), pangolins, whales and ungulates (hooved mammals).
To uncover genomic changes that contribute to the unique adaptations found in bats, the team systematically searched for gene differences between bats and other mammals, identifying regions of the genome that have evolved differently in bats and the loss and gain of genes that may drive bats' unique traits
The researchers found evidence the exquisite genomes revealed "fossilized viruses," evidence of surviving past viral infections, and showed that bat genomes contained a higher diversity of these viral remnants than other species providing a genomic record of ancient historical interaction with viral infections. The genomes also revealed the signatures of many other genetic elements besides ancient viral insertions, including 'jumping genes' or transposable elements.
Six reference-quality genomes reveal evolution of bat adaptations, Nature (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2486-3
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-genomic-basis-superpowers-revealed-su...
Jul 23, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Researchers diffract a beam of organic molecules
A team of researchers has succeeded in diffracting a beam of organic molecules. In their paper published in the journal Physical Review Letters, the researchers describe demonstrating Bragg diffraction of the molecules ciprofloxacin and phthalocyanine.
Over the long history of wave-particle research, scientists have found that light is both a wave and a particle. They have also shown that electrons have a similar wave-particle duality. Physicists theorize that wave-particle duality is a fundamental feature of the universe. This suggests that all matter should have wave-like phenomena, which means that it should be able to behave in ways that are similar to light and electrons. As one example, it should be possible to demonstrate interference and diffraction of matter, such as whole molecules. In this new effort, the researchers have done exactly that by demonstrating a type of diffraction pattern with molecules of ciprofloxacin (an antibiotic) and phthalocyanine (a kind of dye).
The work involved firing a laser beam at a sheet of glass upon which the ciprofloxacin and phthalocyanine molecules were applied, forcing them to fly off the glass at a very rapid speed. The molecules flew toward a barrier with a vertical slit that allowed only those molecules traveling in the desired direction to pass through. Those that passed through were met by another laser beam focused with a standing wave pattern. The high-intensity parts of the beam deflected the molecules in a way akin to passing through a gap, which led to the creation of a diffraction pattern. The molecules were then directed through another slit and immediately thereafter impacted a flat screen, where they adhered. And because the types of molecules the researchers chose for the experiment glow when exposed to UV or blue light, the researchers were able to see them. By running the experiment for a short period of time, the researchers were able to observe a pattern appear on the screen—evidence of a diffraction pattern.
The researchers were able to create different patterns by using different initial laser velocities and different incident angles. They note also that the patterns were weak, though still observable, and agreed with theory.
Sophia Chen. Defracting a Beam of Organic Molecules, Physics (2020). DOI: 10.1103/Physics.13.s93
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-diffract-molecules.html?utm_source=nw...
Jul 23, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
'Seeing' and 'manipulating' functions of living cells
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-functions-cells.html?utm_source=nwlet...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-leak-sea-bed-methane-antarctica.html?...
Active leak of sea-bed methane discovered in Antarctica for first time
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-evidence-hormone-disruptor-chemical-t...
Evidence of "hormone disruptor" chemical threats grows
A growing number of chemicals in pesticides, flame retardants, and certain plastics have been linked to widespread health problems including infertility, diabetes, and impaired brain development, a set of reviews of hundreds of studies concludes.
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-toxic-wildfire-ages.html?utm_source=n...
'Four times more toxic': How wildfire smoke ages over time
Enormous plumes of smoke thrown into the atmosphere by uncontrolled wildfires may be affecting the health of people living hundreds of miles away.
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-unique-narrow-wavebands-uv-germs.html...
Researchers describe unique system for testing how well narrow wavebands of UV light kill germs
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-cells.html?utm_source=nwletter&ut...
Cells communicate by doing the 'wave'
Jul 23, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
https://theconversation.com/bacteria-and-viruses-are-travelling-the...
Bacteria and viruses are travelling the world on highways in the sky
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** Chronic fatigue syndrome may hold keys to understanding post-Covid syndrome
https://www.statnews.com/2020/07/21/chronic-fatigue-syndrome-keys-u...
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https://www.sciencealert.com/new-study-says-a-blood-test-can-find-5...
New Blood Test Detects 5 Types of Cancer Years Before Standard Diagnosis
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https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/quantum-tunneling-is-not...
Quantum Tunneling Is Not Instantaneous, Physicists Show
A new experiment tracks the transit time of particles burrowing through barriers, revealing previously unknown details of a deeply counterintuitive phenomenon
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** New research identifies the rules that termites use to build their nests
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-termites.html?utm_source=nwletter&...
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https://www.the-scientist.com/notebook/fly-colonies-help-calculate-...
Forensic science: Fly Colonies Help Calculate Time of Death of Car Trunk Cadavers
Using pigs as human proxies, forensic entomologists reveal how bodies in vehicles decompose differently from those dumped outside.
Jul 23, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
COVID-19 lockdown caused 50% global reduction in human-linked Earth vibrations
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-covid-lockdown-global-reduction-human...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-topological-magnet-exotic-...
Scientists discover a topological magnet that exhibits exotic quantum effects
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-technique-capture-carbon-dioxide-grea...
New technique to capture carbon dioxide could greatly reduce power plant greenhouse gases
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-quantum-physicists-mystery-strange-me...
Quantum physicists crack mystery of 'strange metals,' a new state of matter
Measuring how long quantum tunneling takes
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-physicists-technology-microwaves-opti...
Physicists develop technology to transform information from microwaves to optical light
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-biologists-cells-resources.html?utm_s...
Biologists shed light on how cells move resources
Jul 24, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Dark energy: map gives clue about what it is – but deepens dispute about the cosmic expansion rate
https://theconversation.com/dark-energy-map-gives-clue-about-what-i...
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https://techxplore.com/news/2020-07-laughter-unique-biometric-signa...
Laughter as a unique biometric signature
The popular view of biometric security often invokes fingerprint readers, iris or retinal scans, and voice-activated systems. However, any unique human characteristic whether the shape of one's ears, the whole face, the pattern of blood vessels in the back of the hand, walking pattern, heart rhythm or even how one types at a keyboard, might be used to provide a secure signature of login. Some traits are easier to analyze than others and some, such as fingerprints, can be spoofed.
Research published in the International Journal of Biometrics has taken an amusing trait to demonstrate how the way a person laughs might be used in biometrics.
people can recognize other people by the unique nature of their laughter, perhaps in an even more obvious way than their voice. Moreover, while many people are adept at impersonating the voices of other people, mimicking someone's laugh is far more difficult. The team has now used statistical analyses of the various audible frequencies present in a person's laugh to create a digital signature for each unique laugh.
Tests on the approach show their prototype recognition algorithm to be 90 percent accurate, which compares very favorably with the 65% accuracy of a conventional Gaussian model. However, combining their algorithm with the Gaussian approach can boost accuracy overall by more than 5 percent.
Comfort Oluwaseyi Folorunso et al. Laughter signature: a novel biometric trait for person identification, International Journal of Biometrics (2020). DOI: 10.1504/IJBM.2020.108480
Jul 24, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Mammal cells could struggle to fight space germs
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-mammal-cells-struggle-space-germs.htm...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-lightning-million-year-tropics.html?u...
estimate that more than 100 million lighting strikes on land each year will radically alter forests and other ecosystems in the region between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn.
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-mosquitoes-human-blood-future.html?ut...
How mosquitoes got their taste for human blood and what it means for the future
Of about 3,500 mosquito species around the world, only a few have taken to specifically targeting people for biting, making them important spreaders of infectious diseases. To predict and help control the spread of those mosquito-borne illnesses, it's important to know where and why, evolutionarily speaking, certain mosquitoes got their taste for biting humans in the first place. Now, researchers reporting in the journal Current Biology on July 23 have identified two major factors: a dry climate and city life. Based on these findings, they predict that increased urbanization in the coming decades will mean even more human-biting mosquitoes in the future. They
found that in their native range of sub-Saharan Africa, they show extremely variable attraction to human hosts, ranging from strong preference for humans to strong preference for non-human animals."
"Mosquitoes living near dense human populations in cities such as Kumasi, Ghana, or Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, showed increased willingness to bite human hosts," adds Noah Rose, also of Princeton. "But they only evolve a strong preference for human hosts in places with intense dry seasons—in particular, in the Sahel region, where rainfall is concentrated in just a couple months out of the year. We think this is because mosquitoes in these climates are especially dependent on humans and human water storage for their life cycle."
Noah H. Rose et al, Climate and Urbanization Drive Mosquito Preference for Humans, Current Biology (2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.092
Jul 24, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
https://theconversation.com/as-if-space-wasnt-dangerous-enough-bact...
bacteria become more deadly in microgravity
Worryingly, research from space flight missions has shown bacteria become more deadly and resilient when exposed to microgravity (when only tiny gravitational forces are present).
In space, bacteria seem to become more resistant to antibiotics and more lethal. They also stay this way for a short time after returning to Earth, compared with bacteria that never left Earth.
Adding to that, bacteria also seem to mutate quicker in space. However, these mutations are predominately for the bacteria to adapt to the new environment – not to become super deadly.
More research is needed to examine whether such adaptations do, in fact, allow the bacteria to cause more disease.
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https://theconversation.com/the-ten-factors-linked-to-increased-ris...
The ten factors linked to increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease
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https://www.acsh.org/news/2020/07/21/science-communicators-are-rout...
** Science Communicators Are Routinely Lied About, Harassed, Threatened
Jul 24, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
How to stop your glasses from fogging up while wearing a face mask
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**How Does Caffeine Affect Sleep?
https://www.ted.com/talks/matt_walker_how_caffeine_and_alcohol_affe...
Jul 24, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Experts Provide Tips on How to Wear a Mask Without Fogging Glasses or Short Breath
https://www.sciencealert.com/experts-provide-tips-on-how-to-wear-a-...
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L-type calcium channel blockers may contribute to heart failure, study finds
L-type calcium channel blockers (LCCBs)—the most widely used drugs for treating hypertension—may harm the heart as much as help it, according to a new study.
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-l-type-calcium-channel-block...
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https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-drug-delivery-particles-neur...
Novel drug delivery particles use neurotransmitters as a 'passport' into the brain
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https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-coronavirus-cells-1.html?utm...
Coronavirus makes changes that cause cells not to recognize it
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**
Genetic mutations help super bug become highly resistant to antibiotics
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-genetic-mutations-super-bug-highly.ht...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-key-restricting-antibiotic...
Scientists discover key to restricting antibiotic resistant bacteria
Jul 24, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Coronavirus makes changes that cause cells not to recognize it
With an alarm code, we can enter a building without bells going off. It turns out that the SARS coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has the same advantage entering cells. It possesses the code to waltz right in.
How can the coronavirus achieves this?
The scientists resolved the structure of an enzyme called nsp16, which the virus produces and then uses to modify its messenger RNA cap. It's a camouflage. Because of the modifications, which fool the cell, the resulting viral messenger RNA is now considered as part of the cell's own code and not foreign.
How do scientists overcome this?
Deciphering the 3-D structure of nsp16 paves the way for rational design of antiviral drugs for COVID-19 and other emerging coronavirus infections. The drugs, new small molecules, would inhibit nsp16 from making the modifications. The immune system would then pounce on the invading virus, recognizing it as foreign.
Structural basis of RNA cap modification by SARS-CoV-2, Nature Communications (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-17496-8
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-coronavirus-cells-1.html?utm...
Jul 25, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Neanderthal gene linked to increased pain sensitivity
Source: Neanderthal gene linked to increased pain sensitivity
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02202-x?utm_source=Natur...
Jul 25, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Quantum Tunneling Is Not Instantaneous, Physicists Show
A new experiment tracks the transit time of particles burrowing through barriers, revealing previously unknown details of a deeply counterintuitive phenomenon
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/quantum-tunneling-is-not...
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How the Bits of Quantum Gravity Can Buzz
Where there’s cattle ranching and soybean farming, there’s fire, study finds
https://news.mongabay.com/2020/07/where-theres-cattle-ranching-and-...
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US Just Unveiled Its Blueprint For a "Virtually Unhackable" Quantum Internet
https://www.sciencealert.com/us-begins-planning-for-a-virtually-unh...
Jul 25, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
In cell studies, seaweed extract outperforms remdesivir in blocking COVID-19 virus
Heparin, a common anitcoagulent, could also form basis of a viral trap for SARS-CoV-2
In a test of antiviral effectiveness against the virus that causes COVID-19, an extract from edible seaweeds substantially outperformed remdesivir, the current standard antiviral used to combat the disease.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200724104228.htm
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How COVID-19 Causes Loss of Smell
Olfactory support cells, not neurons, are vulnerable to novel coronavirus infection
https://hms.harvard.edu/news/how-covid-19-causes-loss-smell
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https://news.ucr.edu/articles/2020/07/24/neurons-are-genetically-pr...
Neurons are genetically programmed to have long lives
UC Riverside-led study identifies mechanism that prevents death of neurons
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Drug ingredients considered inert might have biological activity
Systematic investigation of excipients reveals that most are inactive, but a few may act upon biological targets
https://cen.acs.org/pharmaceuticals/Drug-ingredients-considered-ine...
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https://www.sciencealert.com/chemists-have-worked-out-how-to-make-t...
Chemists Just Worked Out How to Recycle Some of Our Toughest Single-Use Plastics
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Jul 26, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
How to test whether your home made face mask works properly or not
https://theconversation.com/does-your-homemade-mask-work-142675
To get an idea of how much this might happen, a simple test involving trying to blow out a candle directly in front of the wearer could be tried. Initially, the distance coupled with the strength of exhalation could be investigated, but then face coverings made from different materials and critically with different numbers of layers could be tried. The design of face covering that made it hardest to divert the candle flame will probably provide the best barrier for projecting the virus forward and through the face covering.
Jul 26, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
To prevent the next pandemic, we might need to cut down fewer trees
Study weighs costs of reducing virus spillover from animals against the toll of disease outbreak
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/coronavirus-covid-19-pandemic-p...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-phage-therapy-potential-prosthetic-jo...
Phage therapy shows potential for treating prosthetic joint infections
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https://www.sciencealert.com/physicists-find-a-new-way-to-show-mass...
Physicists Find a New Way to Reveal The Strange, Wave-Like Nature of Massive Molecules
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https://www.wsj.com/articles/sunscreen-chemicals-accumulate-in-body...
Sunscreen Chemicals Accumulate in Body at High Levels
Jul 27, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Seismic waves help scientists 'see' chemical changes beneath a watershed
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-seismic-scientists-chemical-beneath-w...
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Designer nanozymes for reactive-oxygen species scavenging anti-inflammatory therapy
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-nanozymes-reactive-oxygen-species-sca...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-high-capacity-oil-adsorbing-mats-depl...
High-capacity oil-adsorbing mats could be deployed in oil spill emergencies to limit ecological damage
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-publish-seminal-impact-nan...
Scientists publish seminal study into impact of nanoparticles on living species
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-strategy-therapies-brain.html?utm_sou...
Developing a new strategy to selectively deliver therapies to the brain
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https://physicsworld.com/a/earths-atmosphere-rings-like-a-giant-bel...
Earth’s atmosphere rings like a giant bell, say researchers
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https://elifesciences.org/articles/60080?utm_source=content_alert&a...
Meta-Research: The growth of acronyms in the scientific literature
Abstract
Some acronyms are useful and are widely understood, but many of the acronyms used in scientific papers hinder understanding and contribute to the increasing fragmentation of science. Here we report the results of an analysis of more than 24 million article titles and 18 million article abstracts published between 1950 and 2019. There was at least one acronym in 19% of the titles and 73% of the abstracts. Acronym use has also increased over time, but the re-use of acronyms has declined. We found that from more than one million unique acronyms in our data, just over 2,000 (0.2%) were used regularly, and most acronyms (79%) appeared fewer than 10 times. Acronyms are not the biggest current problem in science communication, but reducing their use is a simple change that would help readers and potentially increase the value of science.
Jul 28, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Psychologists show that embedding primes in a person's speech can influence people's decision making
psychologists found that embedding primes in a person's speech and gestures can influence people's decision-making
In both psychology and magic circles, primes are known as actions or words that unconsciously influence the thinking of another person One example is a policeman interrogating a witness tapping his ring while inquiring about jewelry a suspect might have been wearing. It is a technique magicians have used for years. They prime a person or audience by giving them subtle verbal or physical clues to get them to choose a number during a guessing trick, or a card during a card trick. In this new effort, the researchers tested the practice to see if it actually works.
The experiments involved asking volunteers to watch a live or taped performance of a person who, unbeknownst to them, was trying to prime them. The research began with 90 volunteers who were split into two groups. One group watched Pailhès (who is also an amateur magician) perform a live magic act—the other group watched a video version of the same act on a laptop. The act consisted of attempting to get the crowd of observers to pick a predesignated card—the three of diamonds.
As part of the routine, she mimicked an act by British illusionist Derren Brown in which he asks a member of the crowd to mentally transmit the correct card to the others in the crowd. He also asks the crowd to think about a bright, vivid colored card (more descriptive of a red card than a black one). He also mimes the shape of a diamond with his hands and asks the audience to think of the little numbers at the corners (ruling out double digits and face cards) and even draws the number "3" in the air with his hands—and asks the audience to imagine things in the middle as he says, "boom, boom, boom."
After mimicking this act, the researchers asked the audience members to write down a card by suit and number, which they turned in. Inspection of the cards showed that 17.8 percent of the audience members chose the three of diamonds—38.9 percent chose a three of any suit and 33.3 percent chose a diamond of any number, results that were far better than chance.
Alice Pailhès et al. Influencing choices with conversational primes: How a magic trick unconsciously influences card choices, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2020). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2000682117
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-psychologists-embedding-prim...
Jul 28, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Researchers create 'decoy' coatings that trick infrared cameras
Light can sometimes play tricks on our eyes. If you look at a shiny surface, what you see will largely depend on the surrounding environment and lighting conditions.
Researchers have now taken ocular distortion a step further, finding a way to imbed visual "decoys" into surfaces of objects in a way that can fool people into thinking they detect a specific image in the infrared that actually isn't there.
Infrared light is invisible to the human eye, but can be detected by a range of devices, such as night-vision goggles and thermal-imaging cameras. In this work,researchers can effectively tune target objects into emitting the same infrared radiation as the surrounding environment, making them invisible to infrared detection devices.
But what makes the researchers' work particularly novel is that they can manipulate the coatings in a way that a person trying to view the object with such a device would instead see a false image.
"This structure offers a general platform for unprecedented manipulation and processing of infrared signals.
this method provides better, more consistent camouflage because the product is mechanically flexible, power free and inherently self-adaptive to temporal fluctuation as well as spatial variation of the target temperature.
Additionally, by manipulating the configuration and composition of tungsten-doped vanadium dioxide on coatings applied to the PE tape, researchers can create an infrared decoy.
"How we grow the material changes the image people ultimately think they see.
This kind of technology could prove useful for military and intelligence agencies, as they seek to thwart increasingly sophisticated surveillance technologies that pose a threat to national security. It might also incubate future encryption technology, allowing information to be safely concealed from unauthorized access.
Kechao Tang et al. A Thermal Radiation Modulation Platform by Emissivity Engineering with Graded Metal–Insulator Transition, Advanced Materials (2020). DOI: 10.1002/adma.201907071
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-decoy-coatings-infrared-cameras.html?...
Jul 28, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Testing Chernobyl fungi as a radiation shield for astronauts
How can astronauts survive high radiations during interplanetary travel?
A team of researchers has tested the viability of using a type of fungus found growing in some of the destroyed nuclear reactors at the former Chernobyl nuclear power plant site to shield astronauts from radiation.
Some fungi are able to flourish in a very highly radioactive place here on Earth—inside the destroyed reactors at the Chernobyl site in Ukraine. Testing of several types of the fungi has showed that they not only survive in the former reactors, but actually flourish. They have the ability to absorb radiation and to convert it into energy for their own use. To look into the possibility of using such types of fungus as a shield for humans, the researchers arranged with NASA to send a sample of one of the types of fungus found at Chernobyl—cladosporium sphaerospermum—to the International Space Station.
Once the fungus sample arrived at the ISS, astronauts monitored the petri dish set up by the researchers. One side of the petri dish was coated with the fungus; the other side had no fungus and served as a control. A detector was affixed to the back of the petri dish to measure radiation coming through. The detector was monitored for 30 days. The researchers found that the side of the petri dish that was covered with fungus reduced radiation levels coming through the dish by approximately 2% compared to the control side. That alone is inadequate as a safety shield, but the experiment serves as an indicator of what might be possible. On its own, the fungus is known to grow, which means a rocket carrying humans could carry just a small amount with them. Once on Mars, the fungus could be cultivated on a shield structure and allowed to thicken, offering perhaps one layer of protection very nearly free of charge.
Graham K. Shunk et al. A Self-Replicating Radiation-Shield for Human Deep-Space Exploration: Radiotrophic Fungi can Attenuate Ionizing Radiation aboard the International Space Station, bioRxiv (2020). DOI: 10.1101/2020.07.16.205534
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-chernobyl-fungi-shield-astronauts.htm...
Jul 28, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Study: Mask-Wearing Moms with COVID-19 Can Safely Nurse Babies
None of the breastfed infants in the study tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 within the first two weeks of life.
https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/study-mask-wearing-moms-...
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Microbial Signatures in Blood Are Associated with Various Cancers
A study suggests the potential for a noninvasive diagnostic that could detect tumors early and differentiate between disease types.
https://www.the-scientist.com/the-literature/microbial-signatures-i...
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https://www.sciencealert.com/here-s-what-our-plastic-waste-problem-...
Scientists Show How Bad Our Plastic Waste Problem Could Get by 2040
Jul 28, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
A scientist's mesmerizing animation shows how our entire solar system orbits an unseen center — and it's not the sun
A scientist's mesmerizing animation shows how our entire solar system orbits an unseen center — and it's not the sun: That center of mass is called the barycenter
Jul 28, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Randomness theory could hold key to internet security
https://techxplore.com/news/2020-07-randomness-theory-key-internet....
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Study reveals how renegade protein interrupts brain cell function in Alzheimer's disease
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-reveals-renegade-protein-bra...
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https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-airway-cells-regeneration-ag...
How airway cells work together in regeneration and aging
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-billion-animals-affected-australia-bu...
Estimated 3 billion animals affected by Australia bushfires: study
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** Medieval medicine remedy could provide new treatment for modern day infections
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-medieval-medicine-remedy-treatment-mo...
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First Meta-Analysis Confirms Link Between Lithium in Drinking Water And Suicide Rates
https://www.sciencealert.com/first-meta-review-of-its-kind-confirms...
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AI Analysed Over 11,000 Couples' Relationships. This Is What It Found
https://www.sciencealert.com/ai-analysed-over-11-000-couples-relati...
Jul 29, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
New study reveals how day- and night-biting mosquitoes respond differently to colours of light and time of day
Researchers found that night- versus day-biting species of mosquitoes are behaviorally attracted and repelled by different colors of light at different times of day. Mosquitoes are among major disease vectors impacting humans and animals around the world and the findings have important implications for using light to control them.
The team studied mosquito species that bite in the daytime (Aedes aegypti, aka the Yellow Fever mosquito) and those that bite at night (Anopheles coluzzi, a member of the Anopheles gambiae family, the major vector for malaria). They found distinct responses to ultra violet and other colors of light between the two species. Researchers also found light preference is dependent on the mosquito's sex and species, the time of day and the colour of the light.
Insects are non-specifically attracted to ultraviolet light, hence the widespread use of ultraviolet light "bug zappers" for insect control. this research found that day-biting mosquitoes are attracted to a wide range of light spectra during the daytime, whereas night-biting mosquitoes are strongly photophobic to short-wavelength light during the daytime. Therefore, timing and light spectra are critical for species-specific light control of harmful mosquitoes.
The new work shows that day-biting mosquitoes, particularly females that require blood meals for their fertilized eggs, are attracted to light during the day regardless of spectra. In contrast, night-biting mosquitoes specifically avoid ultraviolet (UV) and blue light during the day. Previous work using fruit flies (which are related to mosquitoes) has determined the light sensors and circadian molecular mechanisms for light mediated attraction/avoidance behaviours. Accordingly, molecular disruption of the circadian clock severely interferes with light-evoked attraction and avoidance behaviours in mosquitoes. At present, light-based insect controls do not take into consideration the day versus night behavioural profiles that change with daily light and dark cycles.
Light is the primary regulator of circadian rhythms and evokes a wide range of time-of-day specific behaviours. By gaining an understanding of how insects respond to short wavelength light in a species-specific manner, we can develop new, environmentally friendly alternatives to controlling harmful insects more effectively and reduce the need for environmentally damaging toxic pesticides.
Lisa S. Baik et al, Circadian Regulation of Light-Evoked Attraction and Avoidance Behaviors in Daytime- versus Nighttime-Biting Mosquitoes, Current Biology (2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.010
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-reveals-day-night-biting-mosquitoes-d...
Jul 29, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Discovery will allow more sophisticated work at nanoscale
The movement of fluids through small capillaries and channels is crucial for processes ranging from blood flow through the brain to power generation and electronic cooling systems, but that movement often stops when the channel is smaller than 10 nanometers.
Researchers have reported a new understanding of the process and why some fluids stagnate in these tiny channels, as well as a new way to stimulate the fluid flow by using a small increase in temperature or voltage to promote mass and ion transport.
The work explores the movement of fluids with lower surface tension, which allows the bonds between molecules to break apart when forced into narrow channels, stopping the process of fluid transport, known as capillary wicking.
This capillary force drives liquid flow in small channels and is the critical mechanism for mass transport in nature and technology—that is, in situations ranging from blood flow in the human brain to the movement of water and nutrients from soil to plant roots and leaves, as well as in industrial processes.
But differences in the surface tension of some fluids causes the wicking process—and therefore, the movement of the fluid—to stop when those channels are smaller than 10 nanometers. The researchers reported that it is possible to prompt continued flow by manipulating the surface tension through small stimuli, such as raising the temperature or using a small amount of voltage.
The temperature even slightly can activate movement by changing surface tension, which they dubbed "nanogates." Depending on the liquid, raising the temperature between 2 degrees Centigrade and 3 degrees C is enough to mobilize the fluid.The surface tension can be changed through different variables.
The simplest one is temperature. If you change temperature of the fluid, you can activate this fluid flow again." The process can be fine-tuned to move the fluid, or just specific ions within it, offering promise for more sophisticated work at nanoscale.
"The surface tension nanogates promise platforms to govern nanoscale functionality of a wide spectrum of systems, and applications can be foreseen in drug delivery, energy conversion, power generation, seawater desalination, and ionic separation.
Masoumeh Nazari et al. Surface Tension Nanogates for Controlled Ion Transport, ACS Applied Nano Materials (2020). DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.0c01304
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-discovery-sophisticated-nanoscale.htm...
Jul 29, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Researchers have for the first time measured a fundamental property of magnets called magnon polarization—and in the process, are making progress towards building low-energy devices.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-probing-properties-magnetic-quasi-par...
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CERN experiment reports first evidence for ultra-rare process that could lead to new physics
Scientists at CERN have reported on their first significant evidence for a process predicted by theory, paving the way for searches for evidence of new physics in particle processes that could explain dark matter and other mysteries of the universe.
the first significant experimental evidence for the ultra-rare decay of the charged kaon into a charged pion and two neutrinos, (i.e. K+ → π+νν).
The decay process is important in cutting-edge physics research because it is so sensitive to deviations from theoretical predictions. This means that it is one of the most interesting things to observe for physicists looking for evidence to supports alternative theoretical model in particle physics.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-cern-evidence-ultra-rare-physics.html...
Jul 29, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Scientists reveal an explosive secret hidden beneath seemingly trustworthy volcanoes
An international team of volcanologists working on remote islands in the Galápagos Archipelago has found that volcanoes which reliably produce small basaltic lava eruptions hide chemically diverse magmas in their underground plumbing systems—including some with the potential to generate explosive activity.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-reveal-explosive-secret-hi...
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Microbiologists clarify relationship between microbial diversity and soil carbon storage:
shifts in the diversity of soil microbial communities can change the soil's ability to sequester carbon, where it usually helps to regulate climate.
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-microbiologists-relationship-microbia...
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** https://phys.org/news/2020-07-pesticides-crops-hydrophobic-pollutan...
Pesticides can protect crops from hydrophobic pollutants
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** https://www.sciencenews.org/article/black-hole-circling-wormhole-we...
A black hole circling a wormhole would emit weird gravitational waves
Hypothetical tunnels in spacetime could show up in LIGO and Virgo data
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**Vaccine nationalism: Coronavirus: how countries aim to get the vaccine first by cutting opaque supply deals
https://theconversation.com/coronavirus-how-countries-aim-to-get-th...
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‘Vaccine nationalism’ threatens global plan to distribute COVID-19 shots fairly
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/07/vaccine-nationalism-threate...
Jul 29, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
The Brittle Star That Sees with Its Body
It turns out that eyes aren’t necessary for vision
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-brittle-star-that-se...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-method-properties-complex-quantum.htm...
A method to predict the properties of complex quantum systems
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-remnant-ancient-globular-cluster-kind...
Discovered: Remnant of ancient globular cluster that's 'the last of its kind'
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-encode-consortium-rna-sequences-invol...
RNA sequences that are involved in regulating gene expression have been identified
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-giant-atoms-enable-quantum.html?utm_s...
'Giant atoms' enable quantum processing and communication in one
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-decline-bees-pollinators-threatens-cr...
Decline of bees, other pollinators threatens crop yields
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-uncover-cells-interact-proteins-wound...
Researchers uncover how cells interact with supporting proteins to heal wounds
Jul 29, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Gold nanosensor spots difference between dengue, Zika
A new class of nanosensor developed in Brazil could more accurately identify dengue and Zika infections, a task that is complicated by their genetic similarities and which can result in misdiagnosis. The technique uses gold nanoparticles and can "observe" viruses at the atomic level.
Dengue is a disease that kills—and can do so quickly if the right diagnosis is not made. As for Zika, it offers risks for fetuses to develop microcephaly, and we can't let pregnant women spend seven or eight months wondering whether they have the virus or not
Belonging to the Flavivirus genus in the Flaviviridae family, Zika and dengue viruses share more than 50 percent similarity in their amino acid sequence. Both viruses are spread by mosquitos and can have long-term side effects. The Flaviviridae virus family was named after the yellow fever virus and comes from the Latin word for golden, or yellow, in color.
Diagnosing dengue virus infections is a high priority in countries affected by annual epidemics of dengue fever. The correct diagnostic is essential for patient managing and prognostic as there are no specific antiviral drugs to treat the infection.
It is almost impossible to differentiate between dengue and Zika viruses.
A serologic test that detects antibodies against dengue also captures Zika-generated antibodies. Scientists call this 'cross-reactivity'.
There is also no specific antiviral treatment for Zika and the search for a vaccine is ongoing.
Virus differentiation is important to accurately measure the real impact of both diseases on public health. The most widely used blood test, the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), is limited in its ability to tell the difference between the viruses.
As dengue has four variations, known as serotypes, the team created four different nanoparticles and covered each of them with a different dengue protein. They applied ELISA serum and a blood sample. The researchers found that sample antibodies bound with the viruses' proteins, changing the pattern of electrons on the gold nanoparticle surface.
The researchers could see this change by applying certain frequencies of light on the nanoparticle's surface. Dengue proteins absorbed light—Zika ones did not.
The study argues that the gold nanoparticle-based test is more precise than other blood antibody tests because of its high sensitivity and capacity to identify which virus has been detected. The fact that this test doesn't require reagents and uses ELISA equipment, which is widely available and low cost.
Alice F. Versiani et al. Nanosensors based on LSPR are able to serologically differentiate dengue from Zika infections, Scientific Reports (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-68357-9
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-gold-nanosensor-difference-dengue-zik...
Jul 30, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Research team exactly solves experimental puzzle in high temperature superconductivity
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-team-experimental-puzzle-high-tempera...
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https://phys.org/news/2020-07-simulating-quantum-butterfly-effect-r...
Simulating quantum 'time travel' disproves butterfly effect in quantum realm
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Microbes revived after 100 million years
Scientists have managed to wake up microbes that have been buried deep beneath the sea floor — apparently in a dormant state — since dinosaurs walked on Earth
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-17330-1?utm_source=Natur...
Jul 30, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Meta-Research: International authorship and collaboration across bioRxiv preprints
Preprints are becoming well established in the life sciences, but relatively little is known about the demographics of the researchers who post preprints and those who do not, or about the collaborations between preprint authors. Here, based on an analysis of 67,885 preprints posted on bioRxiv, it was found that some countries, notably the United States and the United Kingdom, are overrepresented on bioRxiv relative to their overall scientific output, while other countries (including China, Russia, and Turkey) show lower levels of bioRxiv adoption. This research also describes a set of ‘contributor countries’ (including Uganda, Croatia and Thailand): researchers from these countries appear almost exclusively as non-senior authors on international collaborations. They also found multiple journals that publish a disproportionate number of preprints from some countries, a dynamic that almost always benefits manuscripts from the US.
https://elifesciences.org/articles/58496?utm_source=content_alert&a...
Jul 30, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
‘Keystone’ Species Key To Rebuilding Gut Microbiota After Antibiotics The discovery of gut bacteria critical to restoring gut health offers new insights into microbiome recovery after antibiotic treatment.
https://www.asianscientist.com/2020/07/in-the-lab/keystone-gut-micr...
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Some Uninfected People Have T-Cell Immunity To COVID-19 Researchers were surprised to find memory T-cells in people with no history of SARS, COVID-19, or contact with SARS or COVID-19 patients.
https://www.asianscientist.com/2020/07/health/memory-t-cell-immunit...
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New Report Identifies The 'Greatest Risk' to Human Health, And It's Not a Virus. It is air pollution!
https://www.sciencealert.com/air-pollution-greatest-risk-to-global-...
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Scientists Start Assembling The World's Largest Nuclear Fusion Experiment It'll be 10 times hotter than the Sun.
https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-start-assembling-the-world-...
Jul 30, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Ancient mountain formation and monsoons helped create a modern biodiversity hotspot
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-ancient-mountain-formation-monsoons-m...
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Origami microbots: Centuries-old artform guides cutting-edge advances in tiny machines
https://techxplore.com/news/2020-07-origami-microbots-centuries-old...
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Fear conditioning: Transcranial stimulation to prevent fear memories from returning
A research group from the University of Bologna has succeeded in modifying the negative effect of a returning memory that triggers fear, and developed a new non-invasive experimental protocol. The result of this study, published in the journal Current Biology, is an innovative protocol that combines fear conditioning—a stimulus associated with something unpleasant that induces a negative memory—and the neurostimulation of a specific site of the prefrontal cortex.
This process alters the perception of an unpleasant (aversive) event so that it will no longer induce fear. "This experimental protocol combining transcranial stimulation and memory reconsolidation allowed us to modify an aversive memory that the participants had learned the day before," explains Sara Borgomaneri, a researcher at the University of Bologna and first author of the study. "This result has relevant repercussions for understanding how memory works. It might even lead to the development of new therapies to deal with traumatic memories."
Borgomaneri et al., State-dependent TMS over prefrontal cortex disrupts fear memory reconsolidation and prevents the return of fear. Current Biology, (2020).
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-07-transcranial-memories.html?u...
Jul 31, 2020
Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa
Cosmic tango between the very small and the very large
While Einstein's theory of general relativity can explain a large array of fascinating astrophysical and cosmological phenomena, some aspects of the properties of the universe at the largest-scales remain a mystery. A new study using loop quantum cosmology—a theory that uses quantum mechanics to extend gravitational physics beyond Einstein's theory of general relativity—accounts for two major mysteries. While the differences in the theories occur at the tiniest of scales—much smaller than even a proton—they have consequences at the largest of accessible scales in the universe. The study, which appears online July 29 in the journal Physical Review Letters, also provides new predictions about the universe that future satellite missions could test.
While a zoomed-out picture of the universe looks fairly uniform, it does have a large-scale structure, for example because galaxies and dark matter are not uniformly distributed throughout the universe. The origin of this structure has been traced back to the tiny inhomogeneities observed in the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)—radiation that was emitted when the universe was 380 thousand years young that we can still see today. But the CMB itself has three puzzling features that are considered anomalies because they are difficult to explain using known physics.
"While seeing one of these anomalies may not be that statistically remarkable, seeing two or more together suggests we live in an exceptional universe.
A recent study in the journal Nature Astronomy proposed an explanation for one of these anomalies that raised so many additional concerns, they flagged a 'possible crisis in cosmology.' Using quantum loop cosmology, however, we have resolved two of these anomalies naturally, avoiding that potential crisis."
Research over the last three decades has greatly improved our understanding of the early universe, including how the inhomogeneities in the CMB were produced in the first place. These inhomogeneities are a result of inevitable quantum fluctuations in the early universe. During a highly accelerated phase of expansion at very early times—known as inflation—these primordial, miniscule fluctuations were stretched under gravity's influence and seeded the observed inhomogeneities in the CMB.
Abhay Ashtekar et al, Alleviating the Tension in the Cosmic Microwave Background using Planck-Scale Physics, Physical Review Letters (2020). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.051302
https://phys.org/news/2020-07-cosmic-tango-small-large.html?utm_sou...
Jul 31, 2020