3.130 - AMICOR (25)
#Dra. Valderês Antonietta Robinson Achutti (*13/06/1931+15/06/2021)
Navegando no Mar Báltico
#ASRM
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How a DNA ‘Parasite’ May Have Fragmented Our GenesBy JAKE BUEHLER A novel type of “jumping gene” may explain why the genomes of complex cells aren’t all equally stuffed with noncoding sequences.
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| The Colorful Problem That Has Long Frustrated MathematiciansBy DAVID S. RICHESON The four-color problem is simple to explain, but its complex proof continues to be both celebrated and despised.
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| New Chip Expands the Possibilities for AIPodcast hosted by SUSAN VALOT; Story by ALLISON WHITTEN Chips that run on an analog spectrum of memory rather than 0s and 1s could transform energy-efficient AI.
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Squid Game Researchers are trying to endow human cells with the amazing camouflage and color-changing properties of squids’ skin cells, reports Jennifer Ouellette for Ars Technica. Squids’ chameleon-like abilities rely on their control over the microstructures that specialized cells in their skin create. In 2021, Viviane Callier wrote for Quanta about how living things often use diffraction to alter their colors.
Slow Stability Last year, the mathematician Elena Giorgi posted a 900-page proof that slowly rotating black holes are stable. Rachel Crowell writes about the proof and Giorgi’s broader research interests for Science News. In their proof, Giorgi and her colleagues considered what would happen if a rotating black hole were struck by gravitational waves. Steve Nadis explained their proof by contradiction for Quanta last August. |
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# History C hanel
Hans Christian Andersen, one of the world’s greatest storytellers, is born in Odense, near Copenhagen.
During Andersen’s boyhood, his father died, and the child went to work in a factory briefly. However, he showed great talent for languages and entered the University of Copenhagen in 1828. The following year, he published his literary spoof "A Journey on Foot from Holmen's Canal to the East Point of Amager," which became his first important work.
Andersen wrote several plays that flopped, but he achieved some success with his novel The Improvisatore (1835). Meanwhile, he entertained himself by writing a series of children’s stories that he published as collections. The first, Fairy Tales Told for Children, (1835) included “The Princess and the Pea.” Andersen released new collections every year or two for decades as he traveled widely in Europe, Africa, and Asia Minor. His stories include “The Ugly Duckling,” “The Little Mermaid” and “The Emperor’s New Clothes.” He died in 1875 at age 70.
On April 2, 2005, John Paul II, history's most well-traveled pope and the first non-Italian to hold the position since the 16th century, dies at his home in the Vatican. Six days later, two million people packed Vatican City for his funeral, said to be one of the biggest in history. John Paul II was... read more | #07/04/2023 World Health Organization
In 1948, countries of the world came together and founded WHO to promote health, keep the world safe and serve the vulnerable – so everyone, everywhere can attain the highest level of health and well-being. |
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