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Monday, October 17, 2022

3.107 - AMICOR

 3.107 AMICOR (25) 

Novembro 1995 no Lago Titicaca, Perú-Bolívia.

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MULTIMEDIA | ALL TOPICS

 

Inside the Proton, the ‘Most Complicated Thing You Could Possibly Imagine’

Story by CHARLIE WOOD; Graphics by MERRILL SHERMAN

The positively charged particle at the heart of the atom is an object of unspeakable complexity, one that changes its appearance depending on how it is probed. We’ve attempted to connect the proton’s many faces to form the most complete picture yet.

Explore the visual explainer

QUANTUM PHYSICS

 

Experiments Spell Doom for Explanation of Quantum Weirdness

By PHILIP BALL

If the universe is fundamentally quantum, where does our classical reality come from? One popular explanation looks to be collapsing.

Read the article


Related: 
Physicists Rewrite a Quantum Rule
That Clashes With Our Universe

by Charlie Wood

GEOMETRY

 

Mathematicians Discover the Fibonacci Numbers Hiding in Strange Spaces

By LEILA SLOMAN

Recent explorations of unique geometric worlds reveal perplexing patterns, including the Fibonacci sequence and the golden ratio.

Read the blog


Related: 
Mathematicians Explore Mirror Link
Between Two Geometric Worlds

by Kevin Hartnett (2018)

Q&A

 

The Computer Scientist Who’s Boosting Privacy on the Internet

By STEVE NADIS

Harry Halpin wants our internet conversations to be more private. He’s helped create a new kind of network that might make it possible.

Read the interview

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

 

The High Schooler Who Solved a Prime Number Theorem

Video by EMILY BUDER, NOAH HUTTON, TAYLOR HESS & RUI BRAZ

In his senior year of high school, Daniel Larsen proved a key theorem about primes, impressing prominent mathematicians.

Watch the video

Around the Web

Bees Have a Number Line
In a new study, honeybees continue to display their mathematical aptitude: They order numbers from left to right, suggesting that they have a “mental number line,” Darren Incorvaia reports for Science News. In past studies, honeybees have demonstrated that they understand the concept of zero and basic arithmetic. In 2020 Susan D’Agostino interviewed biologist Scarlett Howard for Quanta about how she teaches math to bees.

Do Zelda Next!
Scientists taught mouse and human brain cells in a dish to play the classic video game, Pong, reports Jon Hamilton for NPR. Studying the similarities between brains and computers has inspired new, efficient computing hardware. In February Allison Whitten wrote for Quanta about an AI that runs on a brain-inspired neuromorphic chip.
#UNDP
Multidimensional Poverty Index 2022 Released
The 2022 Multidimensional Poverty Index Report "Unpacking deprivation bundles to reduce  multidimensional poverty" finds that reducing poverty at scale is possible and unveils new 'poverty profiles' that can offer a breakthrough in development efforts to tackle the interlinked aspects of poverty.

The report identifies a series of 'deprivation bundles' -- recurring patterns of poverty -- that commonly impact those who live in multidimensional poverty across the world. The data are used to identify the poverty profiles that are more common in certain places. This is a crucial step in designing strategies that address multiple aspects of poverty at the same time.
FULL REPORT


#CFM

Publication date: 
October 14, 2022














KEY TAKEAWAYS:
We designed the Burden of Proof study to help consumers makes sense of confusing health guidance
by assigning a star-rating to pairs of risks and outcomes.
  • We reviewed thousands of studies on risks like smoking and eating red meat to determine
    how strong the evidence was that those risks lead to health impacts, and whether it’s worth
    changing your behavior.
  • Five-star ratings – like smoking & lung cancer and high blood pressure & heart attacks –
    indicate that there is strong evidence of association.
  • One-star ratings indicate that there may be no association at all, or that more evidence
    is needed on the topic.



Gamma-ray burst may represent the most powerful cosmic explosion ever recorded
(NASA/Swift/A. Beardmore (University of Leicester))

















Astronomers have spotted a bright blast of high-energy light that may be the most powerful
 cosmic explosion ever detected.
The high-energy emission known as a gamma-ray burst (GRB) – the most powerful type of
 explosion seen in our universe since the Big Bang – likely represents the moment a dying
star collapsed into a black hole, triggering a tremendous supernova explosion, astronomers
 said.
 Full Story: Live Science (10/19)















Astronomers have detected a gargantuan blast of energy from space that appears to be
doing the impossible: Traveling seven times faster than the speed of light. 
This is, of course, an optical illusion — a rare and mind-boggling phenomenon called
superluminal motion, which occurs when particles come very close to moving at the
speed of light. In this case, scientists detected a jet of energy blasting out of a stellar
collision site at a staggering 99.97% of the speed of light — about 670 million mph
(1.07 billion km/h), according to a study published Oct. 12 in the journal Nature.
 
Full Story: Live Science (10/19) 

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