Translate AMICOR contents if you like

Sunday, March 27, 2022

3.076 AMICOR (24)

 3.076 - AMICOR (24) 

#Dra. Valderês A. Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)

Montando no camelo frente às pirâmides, Egito 1977.

#HMV



#Academia SRM 19/04/2022 18h.
"Fotos que vivi: Luiz Achutti 45 anos de fotografia em 2020 by robinson.achutti - Issuu" https://issuu.com/robinson.achutti/docs/livro_achutti_fotos_que_vivi_web_issuu_separado_02

#UFRGS - Patrimônio Histórico.
Design sem nome

Porto Alegre 250 anos: Campus Centro da UFRGS e o desenvolvimento urbano

Na semana em que Porto Alegre completou 250 anos, em 26 de março de 2022, o SPH compartilhou nas suas redes sociais uma série de fotografias de acervo  mostrando a formação e transformação do que hoje conhecemos como Campus Centro da UFRGS. As fotografias exibem uma perspectiva aérea e revelam o campus inserido no contexto urbano de POA. Quarteirão 1 …
Ler mais
Porto Alegre 250 anos: Campus Centro da UFRGS e o desenvolvimento urbano

Vivências na Universidade e na Cidade: UFRGS-Porto Alegre

Hoje, 26 de março de 2022, Porto Alegre comemora os seus 250 anos de existência e, para celebrar a data, o SPH compartilha algumas vivências de pessoas com a UFRGS e a cidade. A cidade teve seu início habitacional com 60 famílias portuguesas açorianas que vieram de Portugal para o Brasil por intermédio do Tratado de Madri para se instalarem …
Ler mais
Vivências na Universidade e na Cidade: UFRGS-Porto Alegre

Projetos na cidade ou projeto de cidade?

Em artigo no Jornal da Universidade os pesquisadores do Observatório das Metrópoles, Paulo Roberto Rodrigues Soares e Vanessa Marx discutem processos de “renovação” da cidade e avaliam o atual modelo de governança urbana em artigo no Jornal da Universidade
Leia mais

UFRGS integra exposição que celebra os 250 anos de Porto Alegre

O Laboratório de Design e Seleção de Materiais (LDSM), da Escola de Engenharia da UFRGS, integra a exposição ‘Entre monumentos e decisões: o patrimônio de 250 anos de Porto Alegre’, organizada pelo Memorial da Justiça Federal do RS e que segue à mostra até o dia 30 de junho.

Leia mais
radioAPRESENTACAO3
Projeto de Acessibilidade ao Prédio da Rádio da Universidade
As doações ao Projeto de Acessibilidade ao Prédio da Rádio da Universidade continuam abertas e garantindo dedução de 100% do valor doado no Imposto de Renda no limite de até 6% do IR devido para Pessoa Física. Saiba como contribuir acessando a cartilha com o passo a passo ou pelo site do SPH.
#Academia SRM

 

#The Verge
Meet Earendel, the Most Distant Star Ever Detected
Meet Earendel, the Most Distant Star Ever Detected
Rafi Letzter, The Verge
The star, imaged by the Hubble telescope, shone just 900 million years after the Big Bang.
#Pop Mechanics
The 50 Most Important Websites of All Time
 

This is the story of the internet, as told by the monumental sites that shaped it.

#Quanta Magazine
My Bookmarks

QUANTUM PHYSICS | ALL TOPICS

 

Massive Black Holes Shown to Act Like Quantum Particles

By CHARLIE WOOD

Physicists are using quantum math to understand what happens when black holes collide. In a surprise, they’ve shown that a single particle can describe a collision’s entire gravitational wave.

Read the article

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY

 

Cells Blaze Their Own Trails to Navigate Through the Body

By ELENA RENKEN

With self-generated gradients of chemicals and physical tension, cells in the body steer themselves to vital destinations.

Read the article


Related: 
The Math That Tells
Cells What They Are

by Jordana Cepelewicz (2019)

Q&A

 

In Music and Math, Lillian Pierce Builds Landscapes

By JORDANA CEPELEWICZ

Lillian Pierce always had a deep interest in numbers, but to her, a career in mathematics was far from preordained. 

Read the interview


Related: 
Inside the Secret Math Society
Known Simply as Nicolas Bourbaki

by Kevin Hartnett (2020)

QUANTIZED COLUMNS

 

Beyond the Second Law of Thermodynamics

By NICOLE YUNGER HALPERN

Thanks to the power of fluctuation relations, physicists are taking the second law of thermodynamics to settings once thought impossible.

Read the column


Related: 
The New Thermodynamic
Understanding of Clocks

by Natalie Wolchover (2021)

QUANTA SCIENCE PODCAST

 

A Solution to the Faint-Sun Paradox Reveals a Narrow Window for Life

Podcast hosted by SUSAN VALOT;
Story by JONATHAN O’CALLAGHAN

When the sun was 30% dimmer, Earth seems like it should have been inhospitably frozen, but new work suggests that dimness may be why life exists here at all.

Listen to the podcast

Read the article

Around the Web

Strengthened Computing Beats the Heat
A new computing method called “momentum computing” may be able to reduce the amount of energy lost to heat by making computations reversible, writes Philip Ball for Scientific American. A typical computer works irreversibly because it erases memory to free up storage — increasing the entropy of the system. That insight was the key to resolving the Maxwell’s demon paradox, as Jonathan O’Callaghan explained for Quanta in 2021.

Waning COVID Vaccine Immunity
SARS-CoV-2 is far from exhausting its repertoire of pandemic tricks. Experts write for The New York Times that they expect the virus will continue evolving to evade our immune defenses and that we will need to get regular boosters as for the flu. The scientists reached those conclusions about what the coronavirus would do next in part by analyzing the “fitness landscape” of its potential mutations. Carrie Arnold reported on their work for Quanta in January.
#JSTOR
Marie Curie and Polish Resistance
By Emily Zarevich
The two-time Nobel winner helped preserve her native Polish language, and undertook her education, at a time when these acts were potentially treasonous. Read more...
#The Lancet
NCD Countdown 2030 CR: Adam Gault/Science Photo Library
NCD Countdown 2030: most countries have made little progress in achieving the Sustainable Development Goal target 3·4, which calls for a reduction in premature mortality from non-communicable diseases (NCDs) by a third from 2015 to 2030.
#BBC
#NOEMA Magazine

 

April 2, 2022

 

PUBLISHED BY THE BERGGRUEN INSTITUTE

 

View the roundup in your browser here. Visit Noema Magazine at noemamag.com

Rupture

A convergence of breaking points demands choices about the future.

 

Nathan Gardels, Noema Editor-in-Chief

A rupture opens up a new space in place of the shattered status quo. It clears away illusions about an old order no longer fit for purpose and makes way for what has been incubating to emerge in clearer form. Above all, a rupture from the past demands choices about the foundations of the future. /.../

#Psyche
#    

Sunday, March 20, 2022

3.075 - AMICOR (24)

3.075 - AMICOR (24) 

#Dra. Valderês A. Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)

Em Atenas, em 30/11/1979
#Elysium Health

 
E
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

#Academia SR Medicina

#Arquipélago Editorial
Contar a história da música em Porto Alegre é o nosso presente para a cidade nos seus 250 anos

Olá, querido leitor!

Março é o mês de aniversário da cidade que nos acolhe desde a criação da Arquipélago. Porto Alegre comemora 250 anos neste sábado, dia 26, e nós convidamos você a presentear a cidade de uma forma muito especial. 

Porto Alegre: uma biografia musical é um presente para Porto Alegre em forma de livro. É um financiamento coletivo. É também o trabalho de uma vida para o músico e jornalista Arthur de Faria. As histórias que cobrem o período do início do povoamento da cidade até a Era do Rádio já foram escritas com maestria pelo Arthur, mas agora precisam de você para se transformarem em livro. 

Para lançarmos o primeiro volume de Porto Alegre: uma biografia musical nós precisamos do seu apoio. Clique no botão para escolher a sua recompensa e ajude a contar essa história. Vem?

Quero apoiar o projeto!
Assista ao vídeo de apresentação do Arthur de Faria para saber mais sobre o livro:

Arthur de Faria é músico, compositor e arranjador. Pela Arquipélago é autor de Elis: uma biografia musical. Produziu 27 discos, escreveu 35 trilhas para cinema e teatro, integra o Duo Deno, a Surdomundo Imposible Orchestra, o espetáculo Música de Cena e Música Menor – duo com o argentino Omar Giammarco. Por 20 anos liderou o Arthur de Faria & Seu Conjunto, com quem lançou cinco de seus oito discos e tocou em meia dúzia de países. Jornalista e mestre em Literatura Brasileira, ministra cursos sobre música popular brasileira no Brasil, Argentina e Uruguai, trabalhou por 20 anos em rádio, publicou dezenas de ensaios, artigos, livros e fascículos sobre música popular e dedica-se há mais de três décadas à pesquisa sobre a história da música de Porto Alegre.

#AMRIGS & ASRM

#Academia SRM
Link de acesso:
 
ID da reunião: 883 3547 0469
 

#Live Science
COVID-19
Coronavirus variants: Facts about omicron, delta and other COVID-19 mutants
(KATERYNA KON/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images)

















Multiple variants of SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus causing the disease COVID-19, have emerged across the globe. At the moment, two lineages of the omicron variant and the delta variant are the only variants with significant global circulation, with omicron accounting for the vast majority of recent COVID-19 cases, according to a report from the World Health Organization released March 15, 2022. Omicron, also called B.1.1.529, was first reported in November 2021 in Botswana and South Africa, and now accounts for over 99% of coronavirus genome sequences from recent COVID-19 cases in the global database GISAID, according to the WHO report.

Here's a look at the science behind SARS-CoV-2 variants and which ones are the most concerning in different areas.
 Full Story: Live Science (3/24) 

#
My Bookmarks

THE JOY OF WHY | ALL TOPICS

 

Why Do We Die Without Sleep?

By STEVEN STROGATZ

The reasons why sleep is so vital often hide in unexpected parts of the body, as host Steven Strogatz discovers in conversations with researchers Dragana Rogulja and Alex Keene.

Listen to the podcast | Read the transcript 

Related Video: 
Steven Strogatz’s Secrets of Math Communication
Q&A filmed live at the Simons Foundation

NEUROSCIENCE

 

Brain Chemical Helps Signal to Neurons When to Start a Movement

By ALLISON WHITTEN

Work showing that dopamine helps trigger movement is the latest revelation about the power of neuromodulators.

Read the article

Related: 
New Brain Maps Can Predict Behaviors
by Monique Brouillette (2021)

ABEL PRIZE

 

Dennis Sullivan, Uniter of Topology and Chaos, Wins the Abel Prize

By JORDANA CEPELEWICZ

The American mathematician invented entire new ways to understand shapes and spaces.

Read the blog

Related: 
In Topology, When Are Two Shapes the Same?
by Kevin Hartnett (2021)

PARTICLE PHYSICS

 

A New Tool for Finding Dark Matter Digs Up Nothing

By THOMAS LEWTON

Physicists are devising clever new ways to exploit the extreme sensitivity of gravitational wave detectors like LIGO. But so far, they’ve seen no signs of exotica.

Read the blog


Related: 
The Search for Dark Matter
Is Dramatically Expanding

by Charlie Wood (2020)

QUANTIZED ACADEMY

 

What a Math Party Game Tells Us About Graph Theory

By PATRICK HONNER

Can we just shake on it? Play this simple math game with your friends to gain insights into some fundamental principles of graph theory.

Read the column


Related: 
Mathematicians Answer Old
Question About Odd Graphs

by Kevin Hartnett (2021)

Around the Web

Quantum Magnetic Migration
Birds navigate by “seeing” Earth’s magnetic field. Peter J. Hore writes for Scientific American about his research into the quantum effects occurring in a bird’s eye that enable this extra perception. Of course, quantum effects don’t usually survive in warm, open environments. But in 2016 Jennifer Ouellette wrote for Quanta about a theory that entanglement can protect quantum particles from decoherence even in classical environments like a bird’s eye.


Divine Distinctions
Some researchers theorize that what sets humans apart as a species is our capacity for abstract ideas like geometry and religion, reports Siobhan Roberts for The New York Times. Emulating our talent for symbolic reasoning could be a necessary step toward building truly intelligent AI. In a 2021 interview for Quanta, John Pavlus spoke with Melanie Mitchell, a computer scientist who teaches AI to think with analogies.
Follow Quanta

#JSTOR
Marie Antoinette by Marie Louise Élisabeth Vigée-Le Brun

The Drama of Point d’Alençon Needle Lace

In its heyday, lace was beautiful, expensive, and handmade.
Naturally, lace smuggling became the stuff of legend.