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Weird & Interesting science - Printable Version +- Drunkard's Walk Forums (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums) +-- Forum: General (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: General Chatter (http://www.accessdenied-rms.net/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=2) +--- Thread: Weird & Interesting science (/showthread.php?tid=13343) |
RE: Weird & Interesting science - classicdrogn - 06-17-2022 This one was in my recs side panel from that, but of course not everyone will get the same things there: Symmetry-breaking Time Crystals Yes, in real life. RE: Weird & Interesting science - Norgarth - 06-25-2022 not entirely sure this is the best place to post this, but I saw a post copied from Tumblr about how to stop tinnitus (at least temporarily) and though someone might find it useful. https://cadhla182.tumblr.com/image/687878340376412160 RE: Weird & Interesting science - Norgarth - 06-26-2022 Anton Petrov - Evidence that life started on Earth much earlier than we thought... RE: Weird & Interesting science - classicdrogn - 07-03-2022 Layman's explanation for one of the recent steps toward launching more major moon missions: RE: Weird & Interesting science - RMH999 - 07-09-2022 Twins connected at the brain can hear each others thoughts and see through the others eyes I'd heard about them when they were infants - they're 12 now. Their brains are connected at the thalamus, and they can hear each others thoughts - they call it "talking in our heads." They can see through the others eyes, and partially control the other's body. One twin can control 3 of the arms, the other can control 3 of the legs, or they can self-control their own. RE: Weird & Interesting science - classicdrogn - 07-09-2022 I suppose that gives some direction about where to look in terms of brain-to-machine interface hardware like your classic cyberpunk neuro-jack, and also the problems to overcome with it. Unfortunate that it'll probably take a grimgerp corporate dystopia (or other outbreak of Nazi Mad Science) with full-Holocaust level human rights abuse to get it, because the consequences of not getting it perfectly right are yikes. RE: Weird & Interesting science - robkelk - 07-10-2022 Researchers in London say they have identified a new species of the giant water lily plant — after discovering it had been sitting serenely in their collection for 177 years. No, it isn't a fossil, it's a living plant. RE: Weird & Interesting science - RMH999 - 07-11-2022 Interesting and disturbing at the same time - Parasitic worms attracted to cancer cells being modified to carry anti-cancer drugs Summary: Some nematodes (small worms) are attracted to cancer cells for some reason. This lab is working on ways to coat them with anti-cancer drugs and let the worms carry the drugs to cancers. RE: Weird & Interesting science - RMH999 - 07-11-2022 First color image from the James Webb Telescope RE: Weird & Interesting science - Norgarth - 07-14-2022 1.5 million year old fossil could throw out our assumptions about human evolution RE: Weird & Interesting science - robkelk - 08-03-2022 The most recent (as of this typing) "What If?" is How much damage would a hail storm with size 5 soccer ball sized hail do? Well, these aren't quite that big: 'Grapefruit-sized hail' fell in Alberta Monday, and it may break a record RE: Weird & Interesting science - robkelk - 08-12-2022 If this is real ... and that's a mighty big "if" ... this goes beyond "weird and interesting" and into "axiom-changing". However, there's no peer-reviewed paper to read yet, so take this with a bowl of chicken-soup-powered cold fusion. A team of scientists from Georgia Tech say they've built a robot that can move without anything to push against – a discovery that seems to violate the law of conservation momentum. RE: Weird & Interesting science - Norgarth - 08-18-2022 A live stream from the James Webb telescope, currently watch Betelgueuse which is expected to go supernova very soon (how they came to this prediction I don't know) EDIT; deleted the video since it had changed to a live stream of lunar images, and obviously wasn't anything actually important in the first place RE: Weird & Interesting science - hazard - 08-18-2022 They note it as 'just a guess' so I'm guessing they did it by witchcraft. RE: Weird & Interesting science - Bob Schroeck - 08-19-2022 Nah, I was watching when it hit zero, and it immediately reset to 30 minutes. They were just running a half-hour countdown over and over again. RE: Weird & Interesting science - Norgarth - 09-09-2022 Anton Petrov - Unexpected discovery of another crater from the time the dinosaurs died RE: Weird & Interesting science - robkelk - 09-17-2022 Does constipation affect a scorpion's ability to mate? How do ducklings swim in formation? Can somebody design a moose crash test dummy? What makes legal documents unnecessarily difficult to understand? These questios, and many more, are answered by this year's winners of the Ig Nobel Prize. (Article contains links to the academic papers.) RE: Weird & Interesting science - hazard - 09-17-2022 I would not call 'what makes legal documents unnecessarily difficult to understand' something that should receive an Ignobel prize. As it would help point out what things to avoid hard to understand legal documentation. Hell, IIRC legal documents in the Netherlands are legally forbidden in the to be excessively difficult to understand so as to ensure that everybody who reads the damn things know what the terms are. RE: Weird & Interesting science - classicdrogn - 09-24-2022 James Webb Space Telescope (possibly) Proves The Big Bang Theory Is Wrong link RE: Weird & Interesting science - classicdrogn - 09-27-2022 Successful first test shot for an interplanetary weapon That asteroid never knew what was coming for it! RE: Weird & Interesting science - Norgarth - 10-16-2022 Antov Petrov - Updates from Saturn's moon Titan, will we find life here instead? RE: Weird & Interesting science - Shepherd - 10-26-2022 Geomagnetic fields reveal the truth behind Biblical narratives https://phys.org/news/2022-10-geomagnetic-fields-reveal-truth-biblical.html RE: Weird & Interesting science - robkelk - 11-19-2022 Black hole discovered 480 parsecs away. Abstract and paper at the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Pop-science discussion at CBC (about halfway down the page) RE: Weird & Interesting science - classicdrogn - 12-01-2022 How Physicists Created a Wormhole in a Quantum Computer "As exciting as the discovery of the Higgs (particle)" RE: Weird & Interesting science - robkelk - 12-03-2022 And that's (over) 300 posts. New thread is new |