Friday, October 28, 2022

3.108 AMICOR (25)

 3.108 - AMICOR (25) 

#Dra. Valderês Antonietta Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021
Em nosso jardim (19??). Ela gostava muito de rosas, principalmente cor de rosas...

#Scientific America

How the Ancient Viral DNA in Our Genome Affects Disease and Development
 

GENETICS

How the Ancient Viral DNA in Our Genome Affects Disease and Development

Human endogenous retroviruses make up 8 percent of the human genome. Researchers are studying how active they are

By Aidan Burn,The Conversation US
Why Elephants Don't Get Cancer
 

GENETICS

Why Elephants Don't Get Cancer

Elephants use 20 copies of a key cancer-fighting gene—and humans just have one

By Rachel Nuwer

#Academia SR Medicina (pena, mas não terei condições de participar)


#Nature Microgiology

#Nature Briefing

#

My Bookmarks

GENOMICS | ALL TOPICS

 

How Genes Can Leap From Snakes to Frogs

By VERONIQUE GREENWOOD

The discovery of a hot spot for horizontal gene transfer draws attention to the possible roles of parasites and ecology in such changes.

Read the article

ASTROPHYSICS

 

Brightest-Ever Space Explosion Could Help Explain Dark Matter

By JONATHAN O'CALLAGHAN

A recent gamma-ray burst known as the BOAT appears to have produced a high-energy particle that shouldn’t exist. For some, dark matter provides the explanation.

Read the blog


Related: 
Gamma-Ray Bursts
Continue to Surprise

By Jonathan O'Callaghan (2021)

CRYPTOGRAPHY

 

New Entanglement Results Hint at Better Quantum Codes

By ALLISON PARSHALL

A team of physicists has entangled three photons over a considerable distance, which could lead to more powerful quantum cryptography.

Read the blog


Related: 
Stephanie Wehner Is
Designing a Quantum Internet

By Natalie Wolchover (2019)

INSIGHTS PUZZLE

 

How to Win at Wordle (Without Cheating)

By PRADEEP MUTALIK

This month's puzzle column attempts to use objective techniques to address some interesting aspects of Wordle. Try your hand at a solution in the comments section for a chance to win a free Quanta T-shirt or book.

Solve the puzzle


Related:
Why Claude Shannon Would
Have Been Great at Wordle

By Patrick Honner

QUANTA SCIENCE PODCAST

 

Protein Blobs Linked to Alzheimer’s Affect Aging in All Cells

Podcast hosted by SUSAN VALOT;
Story by VIVIANE CALLIER

A first-of-its-kind study offers a fresh perspective on what happens inside cells as they age.


Listen to the podcast

Read the article

Around the Web

It’s (Chatty) Turtles All the Way Down
Even typically quiet animals like turtles can vocalize. Recent work suggests that all forms of acoustic communications had a common origin 470 million years ago, evolving in concert with lungs, reports Elizabeth Pennisi for Science Magazine. All land vertebrates vocalize, but only some can mimic sounds that they hear. Neuroscientist Erich Jarvis has found that this “vocal learning” uses the same brain pathways as language. Jordana Cepelewicz interviewed Jarvis for Quanta in 2018.



Stretchy Protons Stunt the Strong Force
Protons are stretchier than expected. Their constituent quarks are pulled apart by an electric field more easily than the Standard Model predicts, reports James Riordon for Science News. Quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the model that describes how quarks interact with one another, is a notoriously complicated theory. In 2020 Charlie Wood wrote for Quanta about the unwieldy calculations needed for QCD. Recently, physicists helped create a series of animations to better understand the physics happening inside a proton. Last week, Quanta published an explainer using visuals from the collaboration.

#NSF

white bird with a red face a long beak
 
Research News

Bird enzyme points toward novel therapies

October 26, 2022
Thank the crested ibis for a clue that could someday help human bodies make their own drugs. The rare bird is the only one known to naturally produce…

#United Nations (*24/10/1945)

Peace, dignity and equality on a healthy planet

#28/10/2022 Bortolo Borin Achutti +. Nosso pai estaria completando 124 anos, e dois dias antes, 95 do casamento, com nossa mãe Luiza Cechella Achutti+. Na foto, quando comemoravam dez anos de casados, conosco estavam nossas duas irmãs: Lia Maria+ e Maria Helena, hoje com 92 anos, vivendo  comigo. 


Para celebrar, com a permissão do autor, divulgo o link de um capítulo do Professor Julio Bitencourt-Francisco sobre "Arábia santa-marienses: A saga dos imigrantes sírios e libaneses", já acessivel on-line, mas que será publicado como capítulo do livro 'História de Santa Maria: novos olhares'. O organizador é o Historiador Gustavo Andrade, devendo chegar às livrarias em fevereiro do ano que vem, mas também deverá estar online. 


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