3.089 - AMICOR (25)
#Dra. Valderês Antonietta Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)
Em Canela (RS) no Laje de Pedra
(clicar em Apresentação de Slides)
Ainda em homenagem à minha Dra. Valderês e a todas as mulheres, que ela tão bem rerpesentou em vida, estou publicando (link junto ao título), um artigo meu que foi publicado na ZH de 22/10/1996.
Também outros dois artigos na mesma linha, Do ventre ao colo materno publicado em os Médicos Prescrevem. Só Livros, 1995 -pag. 21-29. e,
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Wheel Made of ‘Odd Matter’ Spontaneously Rolls UphillBy BEN BRUBAKER Physicists have solved a key problem of robotic locomotion by revising the usual rules of interaction between simple component parts.
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| The Brain Has a ‘Low-Power Mode’ That Blunts Our SensesBy ALLISON WHITTEN Neuroscientists uncovered an energy-saving mode in vision-system neurons that works at the cost of being able to see fine-grained details. It might be significant for memory and learning too.
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| What Is Life?Podcast hosted by STEVEN STROGATZ Without a good definition of life, how do we look for it on alien planets? Steven Strogatz speaks with Robert Hazen, a mineralogist and astrobiologist, and Sheref Mansy, a chemist, to learn more.
Listen to the podcast
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| Special Surfaces Remain Distinct in Four DimensionsBy KEVIN HARTNETT For decades mathematicians have searched for a specific pair of surfaces that can’t be transformed into each other in four-dimensional space. Now they’ve found them.
Read the article Related: In Topology, When Are Two Shapes the Same? by Kevin Hartnett (2021) |
| The Computer Scientist Who Parlays Failures Into BreakthroughsBy MORDECHAI RORVIG In an interview, Daniel Spielman discusses the power of thinking, what makes a successful collaboration and how research is like gambling.
Read the interview Related: Researchers Defeat Randomness to Create Ideal Code by Mordechai Rorvig (2021) |
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Lean In Mathematicians are building a digital repository of mathematics using a software program called Lean. In 2020 Kevin Hartnett wrote for Quanta about Lean and the future of mathematics and computer-aided proofs. Lean has come a long way since 2020. Last month, a team of researchers released an algorithm that can automatically prove multiple mathematical theorems after using the Lean database as a training set.
Gaia's Latest Look New data from the Gaia space observatory gives us the most in-depth look yet at our galaxy. The data includes the chemical makeup of over 60,000 asteroids and detailed maps of the dust between stars, reports Asa Stahl for Science News. Gaia’s previous Milky Way map was already helping to fill in some missing pieces about our galaxy. It analyzed over 1.6 billion stars and found new features such as flowing streams of stars, Natalie Wolchover wrote for Quanta in 2018. |
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#AEON Magazine
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