TGINSIGHT CHAT
EverythingScience
@EverythingScience
EducationDiscover the best, curated science facts, news, discoveries, videos, and more! Chat with us: @EverythingScienceChat Contact: @DigitisedRealitySupport
Recent posts
Page 46 of 85 · 1,014 posts
Posted Jan 26
Curious what 22 years of Chandra observations sound like? This sonification includes every Chandra observation from 1999 - 2021. 🎵 Source: @chandraxray @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 26
Starfish Control Hundreds of Feet Without a Brain. Here's How. Source:ScienceAlert @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 26
Smaller Than a Grain of Salt: Engineers Create the World’s Tiniest Wireless Brain Implant Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 25
Viruses Play a Critical Role in The Ocean's Food Web, Study Finds Source:ScienceAlert @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 25
Helix Nebula (NIRCam) A new image from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope of a portion of the Helix Nebula highlights comet-like knots, fierce stellar winds, and layers of gas shed off by a dying star interacting with its surrounding environment. Webb’s image also shows the stark transition between the hottest gas to the coolest gas as the shell expands out from the central white dwarf. Source:NASA|High-res @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 25
Webb Reveals What Happens When a Sun Like Ours Dies First identified in the early 1800s, the Helix Nebula is one of the most recognizable planetary nebulas in the night sky, known for its dramatic ring-like appearance. Because it is one of the closest planetary nebulas to Earth, astronomers have long used both ground-based and space-based telescopes to study it as a detailed example of how stars end their lives. Those observations have now reached a new level with the James Webb Space Telescope, which has delivered the clearest infrared view yet of this well-known object. A Glimpse of the Sun’s Distant Future Webb’s powerful instruments allow scientists to zoom in on the Helix Nebula and examine what could one day happen to our own Sun and planetary system. The telescope’s high-resolution data brings the structure of gas streaming away from the dying star into sharp focus. These observations show how stars return their material to space, providing the ingredients that later form new stars and planets. Images captured by Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) reveal striking pillar-shaped features around the inner edge of an expanding shell of gas. These structures resemble comets with long tails pointing away from the central star. They form where intense winds of hot gas collide with cooler layers of dust and gas that were released earlier in the star’s life, carving the nebula into its complex and textured shape. Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 25
Scientists Pinpoint New Drug Target for Devastating “Brain on Fire” Disease Researchers have moved a step closer to new treatments for a rare and often devastating autoimmune disease that interferes with how the brain communicates. The study highlights a vulnerable point in the disease process, one that could eventually be used to design more precise therapies. The condition develops when the immune system mistakenly targets the NMDA receptor, a protein essential for learning, memory, and normal brain signaling. By identifying where this attack occurs, the work also opens the possibility of a future blood test that could flag the disease earlier, when current treatments may be more effective. The disorder gained public attention through the bestselling memoir and the 2016 film “Brain on Fire,” but it remains uncommon. Each year, it affects an estimated 1 in a million people, most frequently young adults in their 20s and 30s. Despite its rarity, the illness can progress rapidly and cause life-threatening neurological symptoms. In people with the condition, the immune system produces anti-NMDA receptor autoantibodies that attach to NMDA receptors in the brain and disrupt their function. This immune-driven damage can lead to dramatic changes in behavior and cognition, severe memory loss, seizures, and, in some cases, death. Pinpointing a Molecular Targetz In the new study, scientists focused on identifying exactly where these harmful antibodies bind. They discovered specific regions on a subunit of the NMDA receptor that appear to be central to the disease process. Blocking these regions, the researchers suggest, could help stop or even reverse the progression of symptoms. Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 24
For every dollar we spend protecting nature, we spend $30 destroying it: Report For every US$1 the world invests in protecting nature, it spends US$30 on destroying it. This stark imbalance is the central finding of a new UN Environment Program (UNEP) report released today. It calls for a major shift in global financing of nature-based solutions and phasing out harmful investments to deliver high returns, reduce risk exposure, and enhance resilience. "If you follow the money, you see the size of the challenge ahead of us. We can either invest into nature's destruction or power its recovery—there is no middle ground," said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP. "While financing nature-based solutions crawls forward, harmful investments and subsidies are surging ahead. This report offers leaders a clear roadmap to reverse this trend and work with nature, rather than against it." Source:Phys.org @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 24
Electric Shocks Could Enforce a Lunar Speed Limit Source:Universe Today @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 24
Scientists May Have Discovered a Way to Rejuvenate The Immune System Source:ScienceAlert @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 24
Nanoparticles That Destroy Disease Proteins Could Unlock New Treatments for Dementia and Cancer Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience
Posted Jan 23
Tomorrow marks 40 years since Voyager 2 made its closest approach to Uranus. It remains humanity's first and only spacecraft to have flown by the 7th planet from our Sun. Voyager 2 discovered 10 moons, and examined Uranus's ring system, discovering two new rings. Source: @NASAhistory @EverythingScience