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-   -   Cool Science Story Of The Day [Continuing Thread] (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/744238-cool-science-story-day-continuing-thread.html)

RWebb 01-30-2020 03:08 PM

almost making Benard cells

kach22i 02-11-2020 01:59 PM

Aerodynamics of the flying snake Chrysopelea paradisi: how a bluff body cross-sectional shape contributes to gliding performance
https://jeb.biologists.org/content/217/3/382
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1581458233.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1581458233.jpg
Quote:

A prominent feature of gliding flight in snakes of the genus Chrysopelea is the unique cross-sectional shape of the body, which acts as the lifting surface in the absence of wings. When gliding, the flying snake Chrysopelea paradisi morphs its circular cross-section into a triangular shape by splaying its ribs and flattening its body in the dorsoventral axis, forming a geometry with fore–aft symmetry and a thick profile. Here, we aimed to understand the aerodynamic properties of the snake's cross-sectional shape to determine its contribution to gliding at low Reynolds numbers.

Heel n Toe 05-08-2020 10:39 PM

New Paper Has a Wild Explanation For The Most Explosive 'Meteor Impact' on Record
MICHELLE STARR - 5 MAY 2020

In the early morning of 30 June 1908, something exploded over Siberia. The event shattered the normal stillness of the sparsely populated taiga, so powerful that it flattened an area of forest 2,150 square kilometres (830 square miles) in size - felling an estimated 80 million trees.

Eyewitness reports describe a brilliant ball of light, shattered windows and falling plaster, and a deafening detonation not far from the local river. The Tunguska event - as it came to be known - was later characterised as an exploding meteor, or bolide, up to 30 megatons, at an altitude of 10 to 15 kilometres (6.2 to 9.3 miles).

It is often referred to as the "largest impact event in recorded history", even though no impact crater was found. Later searches have turned up fragments of rock that could be meteoric in origin, but the event still has a looming question mark. Was it really a bolide? And if it wasn't, what could it be?

Well, it's possible we'll never actually know… but according to a recent peer-reviewed paper, a large iron asteroid entering Earth's atmosphere and skimming the planet at a relatively low altitude before flying back into space could have produced the effects of the Tunguska event by producing a shock wave that devastated the surface.

"We have studied the conditions of through passage of asteroids with diameters 200, 100, and 50 metres, consisting of three types of materials - iron, stone, and water ice, across the Earth's atmosphere with a minimum trajectory altitude in the range 10 to 15 kilometres," wrote researchers led by astronomer Daniil Khrennikov of the Siberian Federal University in their paper.

More: https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-have-a-new-theory-about-the-colossal-tunguska-event-explosion

IROC 05-12-2020 07:31 AM

We 3D printed a nuclear reactor core:

https://newatlas.com/science/oak-ridge-3d-printed-nuclear-reactor-core/

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1589293815.jpg

jyl 08-11-2020 10:08 PM

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/08/11/world/ceres-dwarf-planet-ocean-scn-trnd/index.html

Brine, as it exists on earth, freezes by -20C or so. If liquid brine is present on Ceres or Europa or similar, and it is water based brine (I think that’s what the articles say?) then does that mean it is warmer than -20C? Seems warmer than I thought those places were.

Bigtoe32067 08-11-2020 10:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by IROC (Post 10861795)

Man I think that’s so cool you work at Oak Ridge. I was a nuke in the Navy many years ago and wanted to work there but ultimately pursued an opportunity that paid a bit more but I’m sure was way less interesting.
Tony

Bigtoe32067 08-11-2020 10:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by IROC (Post 9922974)
We installed a 70,000 lbs super-critical hydrogen moderator/beryllium reflector on Saturday. No more than .5" of clearance around it all the way down. Dose rates at the plane of the opening of the hole it went into were ~50 R/hr. This was the first time this has ever been done. I am the lead engineer on this installation and will get some mileage out of this... :)

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1518439254.JPG

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1518439254.JPG

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1518439410.JPG

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1518439410.JPG

Man like I said already you have a great job
Tony

Bigtoe32067 08-11-2020 11:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by IROC (Post 9892259)
We (and by "we" I mean ORNL a long time ago) designed, built and tested a nuclear reactor to power an airplane (Aircraft Reactor Experiment). Crazy stuff. I can still see the towers used to hoist a reactor up in the air for shielding tests...

It was for a long range bomber if I remember correctly back in the 60’s.

Sorry to keep commenting on your threads but nuclear power gives me goose bumps. Ever since I joined the navy at 17. Never worked in it after but always followed it in the news.

IROC 08-12-2020 04:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bigtoe32067 (Post 10982339)
It was for a long range bomber if I remember correctly back in the 60’s.

Sorry to keep commenting on your threads but nuclear power gives me goose bumps. Ever since I joined the navy at 17. Never worked in it after but always followed it in the news.

Yep, that's right. That reactor was called the Tower Shielding Reactor, IIRC. They built it and then hoisted it up in the air to understand radiological effects on the ground, etc.

I grew up in this area (East TN) but as a kid never really knew what they did at ORNL. Now that I worked there, I am honestly astounded by the things that man has figured out. Especially the knowledge and application/manipulation of things at the atomic level. You hear/read about this stuff, but we're doing it every day. My whole facility operates by stripping electrons from negatively-charged hydrogen atoms traveling at 90% of the speed of light. Works like a charm!

GH85Carrera 08-12-2020 06:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by IROC (Post 10982417)
Yep, that's right. That reactor was called the Tower Shielding Reactor, IIRC. They built it and then hoisted it up in the air to understand radiological effects on the ground, etc.

I grew up in this area (East TN) but as a kid never really knew what they did at ORNL. Now that I worked there, I am honestly astounded by the things that man has figured out. Especially the knowledge and application/manipulation of things at the atomic level. You hear/read about this stuff, but we're doing it every day. My whole facility operates by stripping electrons from negatively-charged hydrogen atoms traveling at 90% of the speed of light. Works like a charm!

Yea, but it makes it pretty hard to bring your work home and set up a home office. :eek:

Heel n Toe 09-07-2020 08:31 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1599535758.jpg

Hedy Lamarr, often proclaimed “the most beautiful woman in the world.”
The 26-yr-old Lamarr was thriving in Hollywood when, in September 1940,
Nazi U-boats hunted down & sank a cruise ship trying to evacuate 90 British
schoolchildren to Canada. 77 drowned in the bleak north Atlantic. Lamarr,
a Jewish immigrant from Nazi-occupied Austria, who had been making America
her home since 1938, was outraged. She fought back by applying her
engineering skills to development of a sonar sub-locator used in the Atlantic
for the benefit of the Allies.The principles of her work are now incorporated
into modern Wi-Fi, CDMA and Bluetooth technology,and this work led to her
to be inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2014.

Pazuzu 09-07-2020 08:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Heel n Toe (Post 11017957)
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1599535758.jpg

Hedy Lamarr, often proclaimed “the most beautiful woman in the world.”
The 26-yr-old Lamarr was thriving in Hollywood when, in September 1940,
Nazi U-boats hunted down & sank a cruise ship trying to evacuate 90 British
schoolchildren to Canada. 77 drowned in the bleak north Atlantic. Lamarr,
a Jewish immigrant from Nazi-occupied Austria, who had been making America
her home since 1938, was outraged. She fought back by applying her
engineering skills to development of a sonar sub-locator used in the Atlantic
for the benefit of the Allies.The principles of her work are now incorporated
into modern Wi-Fi, CDMA and Bluetooth technology,and this work led to her
to be inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2014.

That's the wrong photo.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1599536838.gif

Heel n Toe 09-07-2020 09:36 PM

:D:D:D



Hedley Lamarr: Meeting adjourned. Oh, I am sorry, sir, I didn't mean to overstep my bounds. You say that.

Governor Lepetomane: What?

Hedley Lamarr: "Meeting is adjourned".

Governor Lepetomane: It is?

Hedley Lamarr: No, you *say* that, Governor.

Governor Lepetomane: What?

Hedley Lamarr: "Meeting is adjourned".

Governor Lepetomane: It is?

Hedley Lamarr: [sighs, then gives the governor a paddleball] Here, play around with this for awhile.

Governor Lepetomane: Thank you, Hedy.

Hedley Lamarr: No, it's Hedley!

Governor Lepetomane: It is?

Pazuzu 09-07-2020 09:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Heel n Toe (Post 11018002)
:D:D:D



Hedley Lamarr: Meeting adjourned. Oh, I am sorry, sir, I didn't mean to overstep my bounds. You say that.

Governor Lepetomane: What?

Hedley Lamarr: "Meeting is adjourned".

Governor Lepetomane: It is?

Hedley Lamarr: No, you *say* that, Governor.

Governor Lepetomane: What?

Hedley Lamarr: "Meeting is adjourned".

Governor Lepetomane: It is?

Hedley Lamarr: [sighs, then gives the governor a paddleball] Here, play around with this for awhile.

Governor Lepetomane: Thank you, Hedy.

Hedley Lamarr: No, it's Hedley!

Governor Lepetomane: It is?


I don't get it.

masraum 09-08-2020 04:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pazuzu (Post 11018009)
I don't get it.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/QVG1uClfOKs" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Pazuzu 09-08-2020 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by masraum (Post 11018121)
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/QVG1uClfOKs" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

I was kidding...

masraum 09-08-2020 02:46 PM

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/your-next-digital-tablet-could-be-made-paper-180975727/

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/TfA0d8IpjWU" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/J0iCxjicJIQ" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Quote:

Engineers at Purdue University have developed a printing process that can turn an ordinary sheet of paper into a Bluetooth-connected, self-powered, wireless, interactive keyboard or keypad.

First, the team takes a plain old sheet of paper with a typical alphabetical keyboard, numeric keypad or even piano keys printed on it and places coats it with a neon-green, omniphobic solution, which repels just about everything, including dust, water and oil, reports Gizmodo's Victoria Song. The solution dries clear, and then the engineers can "print" circuit layers over the page without smearing the ink, according to a press release. The layers are constructed to be triboelectric, meaning friction generates its electricity. Essentially, each time a "key" is pressed, energy is produced, so the paper-based tablet is totally self-powered.

In a preprint paper published in the scientific journal Nano Energy, the researchers explain that those now triboelectric areas can then be used to relay “Bluetooth wireless communication,” much like a wireless keyboard relays letters, numbers and other data to a computer.

All-in-all, the printed device doesn’t need an external battery to operate, says Purdue University engineer Ramses Martinez, one of the paper’s authors.

“This is the first time a self-powered, paper-based electronic device is demonstrated,” Martinez says in the press release. “We developed a method to render paper repellent to water, oil and dust by coating it with highly fluorinated molecules. This omniphobic coating allows us to print multiple layers of circuits onto paper without getting the ink to smear from one layer to the next one.”

The new development relatively inexpensive to employ because it can be applied to a scrap of cardboard or any other paper-based surface. The team hopes that the technology can be used operationally by many different industries.

“I envision this technology to facilitate the user interaction with food packaging, to verify if the food is safe to be consumed, or enabling users to sign the package that arrives at home by dragging their finger over the box to properly identify themselves as the owner of the package,” Martinez says. “Additionally, our group demonstrated that simple paper sheets from a notebook can be transformed into music player interfaces for users to choose songs, play them and change their volume.”

So, the next time you’re about to crumple up a piece of paper and pitch it into the trashcan, you might want to think twice. You could very well be tossing out an important piece of technology.

Heel n Toe 03-23-2021 01:03 AM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1616486483.jpg

It took over a decade and 1,000 hours of photography to create this picture of the Milky Way

Finnish astrophotographer, JP Metsavainio, took on the daunting task of creating a mosaic of the Milky Way back in 2009. It took him twelve years to get the whole picture which is around 100,000 pixels wide and has 234 individual mosaic panels stitched together.

Full res image here (after opening, click to enlarge): https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-TqRxEAjrDYI/YFCLF-H8K3I/AAAAAAAAS-E/rj_avOwDgw0TP66RQURSDcDIOPPxJIscgCLcBGAsYHQ/s7023/000-GrandeMosaic120DegreesLONG.jpg

More: https://www.businessinsider.in/science/space/news/finnish-photographer-jp-metsavainio-took-over-a-decade-and-1000-hours-of-photography-to-create-this-picture-of-the-milky-way-and-20-million-stars/slidelist/81563516.cms

kach22i 04-01-2021 02:27 PM

April 1, 2021
Ingenuity Mars helicopter: The historic journey to fly on another planet
https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/01/world/mars-ingenuity-helicopter-journey-scn/index.html
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1617312297.jpg
Quote:

It was a long seven years of design, building and testing, with a technical crisis or challenge arising every week, Balaram said.
The rigorous work put in to Ingenuity's design and testing is what made the helicopter possible, and the current helicopter sitting on Mars went into fabrication in 2018, Bailey said.

Heel n Toe 05-20-2021 12:26 AM

https://earthsky.org/space/lunar-crater-radio-telescope-lcrt-phase-2-duaxel-radio-waves-dark-ages

Apparently we're planning to build a radio telescope in a crater on the far side of the moon.

If the aliens let us.

flatbutt 05-20-2021 02:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Heel n Toe (Post 11337571)
https://earthsky.org/space/lunar-crater-radio-telescope-lcrt-phase-2-duaxel-radio-waves-dark-ages

Apparently we're planning to build a radio telescope in a crater on the far side of the moon.

If the aliens let us.

We'd need a permanent Lunar synchronous orbiter to provide line of sight transmission to Earth, but that'd be cool.

Heel n Toe 08-08-2021 12:43 AM

Scientists find chunk of blown-apart star hurtling through Milky Way at breakneck speed

A chunk of stellar shrapnel is careening toward the edge of our Milky Way galaxy at almost 2 million mph (3.2 million kph), a new study reports.

"The star is moving so fast that it's almost certainly leaving the galaxy," study co-lead author J.J. Hermes, an associate professor of astronomy at Boston University, said in a statement.

The star, known as LP 40-365, currently lies about 2,000 light-years from Earth. And calling it a star may be a bit generous, actually; Hermes and his colleagues think it's a hunk of a superdense stellar corpse called a white dwarf that was blown apart in a violent supernova explosion after gobbling up too much mass from a companion.

More: https://www.space.com/runaway-dead-star-hurtles-through-milky-way

GH85Carrera 08-08-2021 06:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Heel n Toe (Post 11416939)
Scientists find chunk of blown-apart star hurtling through Milky Way at breakneck speed

A chunk of stellar shrapnel is careening toward the edge of our Milky Way galaxy at almost 2 million mph (3.2 million kph), a new study reports.

"The star is moving so fast that it's almost certainly leaving the galaxy," study co-lead author J.J. Hermes, an associate professor of astronomy at Boston University, said in a statement.

The star, known as LP 40-365, currently lies about 2,000 light-years from Earth. And calling it a star may be a bit generous, actually; Hermes and his colleagues think it's a hunk of a superdense stellar corpse called a white dwarf that was blown apart in a violent supernova explosion after gobbling up too much mass from a companion.

More: https://www.space.com/runaway-dead-star-hurtles-through-milky-way

That sounds like something from a Star Trek episode. The Enterprise will have to figure out how to save the civilization in the way of the star mass.

Amazing stuff. Glad it is 2,000 light years away. We should be safe! ;)

john70t 08-08-2021 08:26 AM

Cool and a bit scary

https://liliputing.com/2021/07/arms-plasticarm-is-a-flexible-microprocessor-made-from-plastic-rather-than-silicon.html

ARM says plastic could be much cheaper to produce, while their flexible nature would allow them to be used in different sorts of applications. They can be used with paper, plastic, or metal foil substrates. So not only are we looking at a chip technology that could be used for wearable devices like smartwatches and foldable phones, but also for food packaging, bandages or other wearable medical devices, and all sorts of other applications.

masraum 08-30-2021 06:43 AM

https://www.wired.com/story/this-barnacle-inspired-glue-seals-bleeding-organs-in-seconds/

Quote:

Excessive bleeding is, in some sense, an engineering problem.

“For us, everything is a machine, even a human body,” says Hyunwoo Yuk, a research scientist in mechanical engineering at MIT. “They are malfunctioning and breaking, and we have some mechanical way to solve it.”

About 1.9 million people die every year from blood loss, sometimes from trauma, sometimes on the operating table. Bleeding bodies are wet, prone to infection, and need urgent care. Yet it’s hard to create a seal on wet tissue, and most commercial products used to stop dangerous bleeding rely on coagulants which take minutes to work. Some people don’t have minutes.

For the last seven years, Yuk’s team has been developing an entirely different approach to stopping bleeding: glue. More specifically, glue inspired by barnacles. Yuk says barnacles hold an evolutionary solution to the problem of sticking to surfaces that are resistant to getting stuck. In a study published this month in Nature Biomedical Engineering, his team demonstrated how this arthropod-like glue can stop bleeding in seconds.

In the experiment, Yuk treated rats with bleeding heart and liver injuries with products typically used by surgeons. No dice—the bleeding continued. On others, he squeezed on the lab’s oily paste. “Exactly the same injury could be sealed in just 10 seconds or so,” he says.

The rats survived thanks to the glue, and so did pigs that were tested by Yuk’s collaborators at the Mayo Clinic. Their evidence, although still preliminary, bodes particularly well for human surgical patients with blood, heart, and liver disorders. “My overall impression of this material is that it's incredible,” says Hanjay Wang, a resident in Stanford University’s Cardiothoracic Surgery Department who was not involved in the study. “It definitely fills a need, especially in the emergency setting, when you need to just get control.”

The team of engineers knew they might find inspiration in the animal world. “The driving force for nature's evolution is survival,” Yuk says. If you want to solve a problem, you can probably find an animal that’s already evolved to solve it. Barnacles caught their attention, he says, because they are annoyingly sticky: “It's sticking on rock, sticking on rusted steel, it’s sticking on slimy surfaces like whales and turtles.”

Barnacles cling thanks to a cement of proteins secreted from glands along each animal’s “forehead.” But the secret sauce—well, more of an oil—is a cocktail of lipids that first sweep contaminants away from surfaces so the proteins can do their thing. “So basically they are terraforming the target substrate,” Yuk says, priming it for a fast, strong seal.

And it turns out that you need a similar superpower when trying to seal up bleeding animal tissue. In a way, says Yuk, blood is a “contaminated fluid” because it’s not a homogeneous liquid—it’s filled with blood cells. For an adhesive to work, you’ve got to shove those cells out of the way.

Instead of using actual barnacle proteins for their test glue, Yuk’s team referred to it as a kind of chemical rubric for devising a high-pressure physical barrier. In place of sticky protein particles, they repurposed a previous lab invention: biocompatible adhesive sheets made from a cocktail of organic molecules, water, and chitosan—a sugar found in hard shellfish exoskeletons. (Barnacles use a similar compound called chitin, and chitosan is already used widely in wound dressings.) Then they tossed the sheets into a cryogenic grinder that pulverized them until they turned into shards roughly one hundredth of a millimeter across.

As the blood-repelling agent, they used silicone oil, which is already used in medicine as an inert lubricant for surgical tools, and as a substitute for vitreous fluid after retinal detachments. The microparticles and oil mixed to create a glue with the look and feel of a cloudy white toothpaste.
barnacle

Barnacles use similar contaminant-repelling oils in order to stick to ships and whales. Photograph: Hyunwoo Yuk

The paste passed through a gauntlet of mechanical tests to record how tightly—and quickly—it could seal issue samples. Yuk squeezed the paste from a syringe onto a sliver of pig heart, then pressed a tiny metal spatula against it. Under that pressure, the silicon oil cleared away debris and fluid. At the same time, the mass of sticky microparticles congealed with the edges of proteins jutting from the tissue’s surface. A strong bond formed within seconds.

Yuk then compared the barnacle glue to products used by surgeons, sealant pastes like Surgiflo and a coagulation patch called TachoSil. In comparison, the barnacle glue formed a bond that was eight times tougher. And when tested on an isolated pig aorta for its “burst pressure”—the limit before a seal ruptures—Yuk’s glue held firm at up to twice the expected pressure from blood flow.

Encouraged, the team was ready to test their invention on live animals. Anesthetized rats bleeding from 2-millimeter knicks in their heart chamber muscles received either the barnacle glue or one of two commercial alternatives: Surgicel and CoSeal. But only the glue overcame the pressure produced by the beating heart to form a seal—the bleeding stopped in seconds. (You can see the video here, but be warned, it’s graphic.) “It was very visually shocking,” Yuk says.

The team repeated similar tests on rats’ livers, an important region for bleeding studies, since it’s the body’s most vascularized organ. Again, the glue stopped the bleeding in seconds. And two weeks later, the holes in the hearts and livers remained sealed up tight. “That rat could wake up and recover. We could cuddle her while we were in the husbandry room,” Yuk says.
barnacle paste

The barnacle-inspired glue is made from a mixture of sticky microparticles and silicone oil, which repels blood away from tissue. Photograph: Hyunwoo Yuk
Most Popular

Then came the pigs. Yuk looped in a team at the Mayo Clinic that was better equipped to operate on large animals. The team wanted to avoid relying on the blood’s natural coagulation ability, since many people undergoing surgery have clotting issues themselves. So, before any experiments, the three test pigs received heparin, a blood thinner. The researchers cut three holes, 1 centimeter wide and 1 centimeter deep, in each of the animals’ livers, then treated the nine injuries with either the paste or a TachoSil patch.

Tiffany Sarrafian, one of the team’s veterinary surgeons, says she’s never seen anything work like this glue. “We just put the paste on, and we're counting” for a few seconds, Sarrafian says, recalling the procedure. “You take your hand off and you're like, ‘Hang on, there's no blood!’ It was pretty amazing.”

Sarrafian had planned that if the comparison commercial patch didn’t work after three minutes, she would reverse the anticoagulant in order to keep the pigs alive, and then allow them to clot and heal naturally. But she added another step to stop the bleeding faster: plopping on a pea-sized squeeze of the experimental glue. “It kind of is miraculous, in a way,” she says.

To be fair, coagulant patches like TachoSil aren't designed to stop heavy streams of blood from tissue with unclottable injuries. But, in medicine, that’s an unmet need, says Christoph Nabzdyk, a cardiac anesthesiologist and critical care physician on the Mayo team. “With aging populations, you have more and more patients that have either acquired bleeding disorders or are ultimately on blood thinners,” he says. “The problem of bleeding, and bleeding control is substantial.”

He and Saraffian add that having an inexpensive glue that stops major bleeding and goes on already-wet surfaces would be potentially lifesaving for patients, and it would be particularly useful in places without a lot of surgical resources, like in wilderness areas, combat zones, or less developed countries.

“Nothing in the material there is totally new, but this concept is really cool and unconventional,” says Shrike Zhang, a biomedical engineer who leads a lab at Harvard Medical School. While materials like silicone oil and the adhesive ingredients are commonplace, their combination makes for something exciting. ”It's pretty early, but the animal data are pretty strong,” he continues.

But, says Wang, the Stanford cardiothoracic surgery resident, there are still elements that need to be optimized before the adhesive could be used in humans. A glob of glue that seals damaged tissue in an emergency, or sticks to surrounding healthy tissue, could complicate any surgeries that follow. “The question is, will you be able to operate in that area?” he asks.

Yuk’s team devised a solution to reverse this type of adhesive seal, and preliminary results in rats are promising.

They also want to know how long that seal lasts; ideally, it should not dissolve until after the tissue has healed on its own, but it also shouldn’t last forever. The new study shows that the paste dissolves noticeably within 12 weeks, based on microscope images in a separate experiment using rats. Depending on the injury and healing response, that may be plenty.

Another challenge is that other types of sealants are known to kill tissue over time. Wang—and Yuk—note that a long-term study will be essential. So far, their longest observation on bleeding organs is about one month after the glue’s application, using the pigs from the Mayo Clinic test.

And while it may still be many years before a sealant paste replaces the trusty suture, both surgeons and mechanical engineers would welcome the ability to glue patients back together quickly, to make bodies once again run like well-oiled machines.

Rtrorkt 08-30-2021 07:41 AM

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/what-stephen-hawking-s-final-paper-really-means?utm_source=pocket-newtab

masraum 10-19-2021 02:05 PM

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4526368/

Playing tetris after a traumatic event may help prevent traumatic flashbacks.
Quote:

Memory of a traumatic event becomes consolidated within hours. Intrusive memories can then flash back repeatedly into the mind’s eye and cause distress. We investigated whether reconsolidation—the process during which memories become malleable when recalled—can be blocked using a cognitive task and whether such an approach can reduce these unbidden intrusions. We predicted that reconsolidation of a reactivated visual memory of experimental trauma could be disrupted by engaging in a visuospatial task that would compete for visual working memory resources. We showed that intrusive memories were virtually abolished by playing the computer game Tetris following a memory-reactivation task 24 hr after initial exposure to experimental trauma. Furthermore, both memory reactivation and playing Tetris were required to reduce subsequent intrusions (Experiment 2), consistent with reconsolidation-update mechanisms. A simple, noninvasive cognitive-task procedure administered after emotional memory has already consolidated (i.e., > 24 hours after exposure to experimental trauma) may prevent the recurrence of intrusive memories of those emotional events.

Pazuzu 10-20-2021 09:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by masraum (Post 11491260)
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4526368/

Playing tetris after a traumatic event may help prevent traumatic flashbacks.

I remember when we would hang out at a certain pizza join in college while studying, they had a stand up Tetris machine. After several weeks of randomly playing that, I would have dreams about tetris block moving in front of my face.

I also spent 2 summers mowing lawns for the city, big lawns, like centers of boulevards, grass as far as you can see. I also found that I had dreams of grass moving past my face the same way it moves past you while mowing.

When I had my traumatic event, I remember having the dead guy's face swim up in front of me over and over while sleeping.


All the same mental issue, it's interesting that just now someone realized that the brain REALLY likes repetition and that maybe finding a way to replace a bad mental repetition with a better one would work.

masraum 10-21-2021 07:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pazuzu (Post 11492855)
I remember when we would hang out at a certain pizza join in college while studying, they had a stand up Tetris machine. After several weeks of randomly playing that, I would have dreams about tetris block moving in front of my face.

I also spent 2 summers mowing lawns for the city, big lawns, like centers of boulevards, grass as far as you can see. I also found that I had dreams of grass moving past my face the same way it moves past you while mowing.

When I had my traumatic event, I remember having the dead guy's face swim up in front of me over and over while sleeping.


All the same mental issue, it's interesting that just now someone realized that the brain REALLY likes repetition and that maybe finding a way to replace a bad mental repetition with a better one would work.

I almost never remember my dreams. I don't remember having a "bad" dream about any job that I've ever had except once. 25-30 years ago, I worked at a retail parts place. In one dream, I remember thinking that I woke up in my room, and when I woke up, one of the dirty parts counters from work wash shoved up against the side of my bed, and there was a line of nasty, greasy, smelly folks lined up at the counter, going down the hall and down the stairs from my room. I think the dream pretty much ended there because my alarm went off to wake me up to go to work (which is probably the only reason that I remembered the dream).

mjohnson 11-22-2021 04:54 PM

Nasa to slam spacecraft into asteroid in mission to avoid future Armaggedon

Test drive of planetary defence system aims to provide data on how to deflect asteroids away from Earth
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/nov/22/nasa-slam-spacecraft-into-asteroid-to-avoid-armaggedon

Occasionally the coneheads (physicists) at the two US DOE weapons labs ponder planetary defense. Some have proposed using components from (very) powerful ABM-oriented warheads from the last century to "nudge" an asteroid out of the way. Evidently just the x-ray photons and the ensuing ablation would have enough impulse to shift things without actually breaking the thing up.

I thought we always used some ragtag group of retired astronauts for this? Have I been lied to all of these years?

flatbutt 01-01-2022 08:44 AM

Chinas Tokamak

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3161780/chinas-artificial-sun-hits-new-high-clean-energy-boost

Nostril Cheese 01-01-2022 09:43 AM

https://www.space.com/james-webb-space-telescope-sunshield-deployment-success

James Webb Space Telescope unfurls massive sunshield in major deployment milestone...

pavulon 01-01-2022 09:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nostril Cheese (Post 11562639)
https://www.space.com/james-webb-space-telescope-sunshield-deployment-success

James Webb Space Telescope unfurls massive sunshield in major deployment milestone...

If the Webb delivers on hype, it should be the poster child for "Game Changer" of the current generation.

Heel n Toe 02-13-2022 09:07 PM

Science/engineering
 
Engineers are building bridges with recycled wind turbine blades
Repurposing the blades could help solve a major waste challenge

On a former train track bed connecting the towns of Midleton and Youghal in County Cork, Ireland, workers recently excavated the rusted remains of an old railway bridge and installed a pedestrian one in its place. The bridge would have been an unremarkable milestone in the development of a new pedestrian greenway through the Irish countryside, if not for what it’s made of: recycled wind turbine blades.

That makes it just the second “blade bridge” in the world. The first, installed last October in a small town in western Poland, officially opened in early January. The engineers and entrepreneurs behind these bridges are hopeful they represent the beginning of a new trend: repurposing old wind turbine blades for infrastructure projects.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1644815033.jpg

It keeps them out of landfills and saves energy required to make new construction materials. When civil engineer Kieran Ruane first saw concept designs for a bridge built with wind turbine blades, he said the idea was “immediately appealing.”

“It was a no-brainer that this needed to be investigated and trialed, at least,” Ruane, a lecturer at Ireland’s Munster Technological University and a member of Re-Wind, the research network behind Ireland’s new blade bridge, tells The Verge.

Creative solutions will be necessary to deal with the wind turbine blade waste that’s coming. Averaging over 150 feet in length and weighing upwards of a dozen tons each, wind turbine blades take up huge amounts of space in landfills.

More: https://www.theverge.com/2022/2/11/22929059/recycled-wind-turbine-blade-bridges-world-first

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1644815194.jpg

john70t 03-28-2022 04:57 PM

Maybe there is such a thing as free energy....

https://www.thebrighterside.news/post/scientists-build-circuit-that-generates-clean-limitless-power-from-graphene
The team’s next objective is to determine if the DC current can be stored in a capacitor for later use, a goal that requires miniaturizing the circuit and patterning it on a silicon wafer, or chip. If millions of these tiny circuits could be built on a 1-millimeter by 1-millimeter chip, they could serve as a low-power battery replacement.

john70t 03-28-2022 05:01 PM

Graphene for the energy. Plastic printed CPUs for the brains.
Voila, computer clothing.

https://liliputing.com/2021/07/arms-plasticarm-is-a-flexible-microprocessor-made-from-plastic-rather-than-silicon.html
ARM says plastic could be much cheaper to produce, while their flexible nature would allow them to be used in different sorts of applications. They can be used with paper, plastic, or metal foil substrates. So not only are we looking at a chip technology that could be used for wearable devices like smartwatches and foldable phones, but also for food packaging, bandages or other wearable medical devices, and all sorts of other applications.

kach22i 07-09-2022 04:47 AM

July 8, 2022
No antibiotics worked, so this woman turned to a natural enemy of bacteria to save her husband’s life
https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/08/health/phage-superbug-killer-life-itself-wellness/index.html

masraum 07-09-2022 08:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kach22i (Post 11738603)
July 8, 2022
No antibiotics worked, so this woman turned to a natural enemy of bacteria to save her husband’s life
https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/08/health/phage-superbug-killer-life-itself-wellness/index.html

Cool story.

Geneman 07-09-2022 09:24 AM

this coming Tuesday. July 12, first images from the Webb telescope. able to eventually see back almost the Big Bang. 13.8 billion years.. will also be able to identify bio-signatures in earth like planets.. pretty cool.

flatbutt 08-20-2022 09:43 AM

Method to destroy PFAs created
 
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/new-way-destroy-pfas-forever-chemicals-rcna43528

This is hopeful news. These molecules are among the most persistent ever created owing to the Carbon/Fluorine bond, but if this can be scaled up, we can be rid of this pollutant.


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