Cool Science Update: May 2013

Cool Science Updates for May, 2o13…

  • NASA’s Cassini spacecraft sent back images of a hurricane on Saturn that measures 2,000 kms;
  • A bioengineered windpipe made with stem cells was transplanted into a two year old girl;
  • A study found that inflammation in the hypothalamus may be the cause of aging;

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  • A possible reason was identified for why embryonic sand sharks eat their siblings in the womb;
  • Researchers 3D print an ear from cells. It contains the electronic components that will allow it to work as a functioning ear;
  • Researchers re-sensitized antibiotic resistant superbugs using a complex found in human breast milk.

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This is the CRAZIEST Thing You'll See All Day

Reblogged from The Bug Enthusiast:

Click to visit the original post

Have you ever literally watched a bug shed its exoskeleton? No? Me either. This guy did.

The Daily Mail wrote about a really, really patient man in Indonesia who watched a grasshopper molt out of its skin, leaving a perfectly-shaped grasshopper exoskeleton behind. Not only are the pictures incredibly done but...have you ever seen anything like this?! Click through for all the pictures.

Read more… 17 more words

Another reblog from the very talented Bug Enthusiast!

grasshopper-skin(It looks to me that the little red ant is taking a big bite from the grasshopper's tush!)

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Plants Use Caffeine to Lure Bees!

Our pals over at the Science Section of the New York Times report ‘Plants Use Caffeine to Lure Bees, Scientists Find.’

Yes, boys and girls…

Nectar That Gives Bees a Buzz Lures Them Back for More

New research has found that caffeine-laced nectar enhances the learning process for bees, so that they are more likely to return to those flowers.

How about that?

Nothing kicks the brain into gear like a jolt of caffeine. And that goes double for honey bees.

bee-coffee-flower(A honeybee visiting a coffee flower – Image: Geraldine Wright)

And they don’t need to stand in line for a triple soy latte. A new study shows that the naturally caffeine-laced nectar of some plants enhances the learning process for bees, so that they are more likely to return to those flowers.

“The plant is using this as a drug to change a pollinator’s behavior for its own benefit,” said Geraldine Wright, a honeybee brain specialist at Newcastle University in England, who, with her colleagues, reported those findings in Science on Thursday.

The research, other scientists said, not only casts a new light on the ancient evolutionary interaction between plants and pollinators, but is an intriguing confirmation of deep similarities in brain chemistry across the animal kingdom.

The effect of caffeine was not obvious at first, but as Dr. Wright refined her experiments, it became more clear that the chemical had a profound effect on memory. “If you put a low dose of caffeine in the reward when you teach them this task, and the amount is similar to what we drink when we have weak coffee, they just don’t forget that the odor is associated with the reward,” she said.

Insect and human brains are vastly different, and although caffeine has many effects in people, like increasing alertness, whether it improves memory is unclear.

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Cool Science Update: March 2013 (2)

Just when you thought March, 2013, had given us so many new science break-throughs…

we give you…

  • growing new teeth complete with roots using cells from adult gum tissue;
  • discovery of a Higgs Boson particle;
  • people ‘functionally cured’ of HIV;

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  • proof Mars once had a wet and hospitable environment;
  • clone of an extinct species of frog and allowed it to develop into an embyo;
  • new device keeps a liver healthy for up to 24 hours after removal from body.

And these are just the discoveries during the week March 10th to the 17th!

Are we living in great times, or what?

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Bat-Eating Spiders on the Prowl

Reblogged from The Bug Enthusiast:

Click to visit the original post

As if spiders weren't terrifying enough, they're now widely eating bats. Like, all over the place.

Previously thought to happen very rarely, researchers have recently recorded over 52 cases of bats (albeit small ones) being eaten whole by massive, massive spiders. The species of bats and spiders involved vary from case to case but it does seem to happen more in tropical climates.

Read more… 46 more words

Great article by The Bug Enthusiast on two of my most favouritest critters... spiders and bats. But... why can't they all just get along? :( aa-tribalfang

Cool Science Update: March 2013

While the rest of us were napping or doing whatever we do, the little geeks and nerdlings out in Scienceland have been hard at work.

Here are some cool science achievements so far this month!

  • Nanoparticles infused with toxic bee venom were found to kill HIV.
  • New evidence suggests the thick ice on Europa has leaks, and that the liquid water is salty.
  • A breath test for stomach cancer was announced.

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  • A man had 75% of his skill replaced with a 3D printed plastic prosthetic (I SO want a 3D printer!).
  • The first documented case of a child being cured of HIV was announced.
  • The Hubble Telescope spotted a Space Invader shaped galaxy.

Cool or what??

Keep on keeping on, science guys! You make our world a better place.

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Sakurajima Volcano with Lightning

Why does a volcanic eruption sometimes create lightning?

sakurajima-volcano-reitze

Pictured above, the Sakurajima volcano in southern Japan was caught erupting in early January. Magma bubbles so hot they glow shoot away as liquid rock bursts through the Earth’s surface from below. The above image is particularly notable, however, for the lightning bolts caught near the volcano’s summit. Why lightning occurs even in common thunderstorms remains a topic of research, and the cause of volcanic lightning is even less clear. Surely, lightning bolts help quench areas of opposite but separated electric charges. One hypothesis holds that catapulting magma bubbles or volcanic ash are themselves electrically charged, and by their motion create these separated areas. Other volcanic lightning episodes may be facilitated by charge-inducing collisions in volcanic dust. Lightning is usually occurring somewhere on Earth, typically over 40 times each second.

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Image Credit & Copyright: Martin Rietze (Alien Landscapes on Planet Earth)

Special thanks to NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day for the photo and text. (Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.)

Oldest Known Star in the Universe

Astronomers have probably found the oldest star of the universe, i.e. nearly 13.2 billion years old, and interestingly it is located near to our Solar System.

“We believe this star is the oldest known in the Universe with a well determined age,” Howard Bond, an astronomer at Pennsylvania State University in University Park, who presented the finding on 10th of January at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Long Beach, California, said in a statement.

This proposed oldest star is referred to as HD 140283 and is located at a distance of approximately 190 light years from us. It is known by the astronomers for more than a century. Researchers already knew that the object is almost entirely made up of hydrogen and helium showing that the star was from the early universe but the exact age of the star was not known.

oldest-star-HD-140283(Artist’s rendering - HD 140283 – approximately 190 light years from Earth)

Bond and the team members, firstly, determine the more accurate distance of the star from the Solar System with the help of 11 sets of observations recorded between 2003 and 2011 using the Hubble Space Telescope’s Fine Guidance Sensors. They then determine the brightness of the star and calculate its intrinsic brightness as the stars’ dimming brightness is always a very good indicator of their age.

Astronomers found that the star is in such phase of its life cycle in which it is draining the hydrogen at its core. They calculated the age of the star to be 13.9 ± 0.7 billion years old. Consider that this age, in the minus side i.e. 13.2 billion years, is not conflicting with the age of the universe i.e. 13.77 billion years.

The age of this star is known with more confidence than the previously known oldest star, HE 1523-0901, said Bond. HE 1523-0901 is also present in our Milky Way galaxy.

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Source: Cowen, R. (2013). Nearby star is almost as old as the Universe Nature DOI: 10.1038/nature.2013.12196

Fruit Flies Drink Away Their Bitterness

Rejected Male Fruit Flies Turn to Alcohol

This is something I ran into at Cracked.com (one of the funniest websites EVER)!

It’s all about sex and booze and fruit flies.

fruitfly(Set ‘em up, Joe!)

For many of us, failed relationships and alcohol go together like New Year’s Eve and also alcohol. That’s one of the pressures of being human; we have our big brains and big emotions, and we need big containers of liquor to forget the bad feelings they churn up. But surprisingly, humans aren’t the only creatures that do this.

Since fruit flies are very sexual beings in the first place, researchers wanted to find out what would happen when they were sexually rejected. This happens often with them, because female fruit flies are prudish things, as they don’t like having sex a second time after they’ve recently mated. If a second male tries to mount her, she’ll kick and run away, as you can see in the video below. Because hey, Mama fruit fly didn’t raise no ho.

After the flies had their time with the female, the researchers gave both males who had been rejected and those who’d gotten lucky the option of eating normal food or food spiked with alcohol. While the happy fruit flies had no preference for either option, the rejected fruit flies were significantly more likely to eat the alcohol-infused food.

And yes, at a basic level, it’s for the same reason you do it. Alcohol triggers reward chemicals in fruit fly brains, and when they don’t get that satisfaction from sex, they’ll get it from a bottle. Or a huge meal of alcohol-soaked food, in this case. And, with that, we’re going to estimate that it will be 48 hours before some depressed college kid tries to eat a pizza he has soaked in gin.

radiohead-songs(“And now, I’m gonna play all the Radiohead songs I know at the same time.”)

Thanks again to that gang of zany madcaps over at Cracked.com!

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