Friday, February 16
Artificial Intelligence and Cancer
Artificially intelligent software has been developed to enhance medical treatments that use jets of electrified gas known as plasma. The computer code predicts the chemicals emitted by plasma devices, which can be used to treat cancer, promote healthy tissue growth and sterilize surfaces.
The software learned to predict the cocktail of chemicals coming out of the jet based on data gathered during real-world experiments and using the laws of physics for guidance. This type of artificial intelligence (AI) is known as machine learning because the system learns based on the information provided. The researchers involved in the project published a paper about their code in the Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics. READ MORE...
Thursday, February 15
In The NEWS
The gory origins of Valentine's Day.
... including the ancient Roman festival of the Lupercalia. (w/video)
Uncovering the earliest account of smooching.
Scroll through a history of valentine cards.
Visualizing America's favorite rom-coms.
The top 50 love songs of all time.
Ranking the best state capitals to live in.
Dictionary.com adds 327 new entries, including "girl dinner."
Clickbait: Cupid's Undie Run hits the streets (for charity).
Historybook: Saint Valentine dies (269); Abolitionist Frederick Douglass born (1818); Pale Blue Dot photo taken by Voyager 1 (1990); Dolly the sheep dies; was first cloned mammal (2003); Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting; 17 killed and 17 injured (2018).
Global Markets Moving Apart
The world's biggest economies are seeing a "decoupling," Bank of America says.
The US is showing surprising resilience, European growth is weak, and China is faltering.
Global stocks have reflected the shifting tides in trade and supply chains.
The biggest players in the global economy are on different trajectories, and markets around the world are reflecting the shifting landscape.
In Bank of America's view, the US economy continues to show remarkable resilience, European growth has faltered, and China faces the most challenging outlook amid real estate woes, deflation, and demographic headwinds.
"Signs of decoupling are present in global growth, trade, and equity markets," Bank of America strategists wrote in a Friday note. READ MORE...
Staying Healthy
My doctor spent a lot of time discussing all the health issues that I was currently experiencing, even though for many of those health issues I was seeing a specialist, like an Oncologist, a Cardiologist, a Urologist, a Dermatologist, and a Orthopedic Surgeon.
However, it made me feel fairly comfortable that she had taken this kind of interest with her patients as I know her behavior was not just for me.
In our conversations, we discussed recent blood work I had a week before and all the medications that I was taking. It is this blood work that is the focus of this posting.
My cholesterol level (both bad and good) was a total of 70... the last time I had blood work, my cholesterol level was 84... so, there is very little difference of levels during those six months.
My low cholesterol level is by design. When I was 40 years of age, I stopped smoking, I stopped eating red meat, fried foods, and sugars (sweets). My focus was on chicken, turkey, fish (cod, salmon, flounder, orange Ruffy), vegetables, and beans. Along with my diet, I add in pita bread, English muffins, rice, and noodles.
Now, that is not to say that I am completely off red meat. About three or four times a year, I will eat a hamburger or an all-meat hotdog or a fully loaded pizza... and the fact that I do this SELDOM is the key to my success. By eating read me a few times a year, it keeps me from eating red meat all the time.
I will put strawberry preserves on English Muffins once in a while as well and eat a cake doughnut from Dunkin Donuts.
However, I am pretty strick with the alcohol and seldom ever break that rule. The older I get the less that I find the need to drink alcohol.
THE POINT HERE IS THAT IF I CAN DO THIS SO CAN YOU...
Fusion Breakthrough to Create Computing Boom
NIF researchers achieved a nuclear fusion reaction that created more energy output than input, a historic first in energy research.
A recent physics breakthrough that could serve as a proof-of-concept for the development of nuclear fusion reactors capable of producing near-unlimited energy has finally passed its official peer-review successfully.
On Dec. 5, 2022, a team of researchers at the United States National Ignition Facility (NIF) in California recorded data indicating that it had achieved a nuclear fusion reaction that created more energy than it took to produce. The reported results were the first of their kind.
In physics, this is sometimes colloquially referred to as a “free lunch,” meaning a nuclear fusion reactor could one day be scaled to the point where it is capable of producing near-unlimited energy. READ MORE...
Wednesday, February 14
Hydrogen Combustion Engine
Hydrogen Production for Combustion Motors and Fuel Cells
Salisbury, Maryland Feb 10, 2024 (Issuewire.com) - Hydrogen internal combustion engines are very similar to traditional spark-ignition engines. Hydrocarbon refueling is a major reason behind today's extremely polluted world. To reduce the further impact, hydrogen combustion engines are the next best option.
Super Bowl 2024
Fastest Lava Flow Recorder
The flow of magma into a 15-kilometre-long crack ahead of the recent volcanic eruptions in Iceland occurred at the highest rate observed anywhere in the world for this kind of event.
“We can have higher rates in very large eruptions,” says Freysteinn Sigmundsson at the University of Iceland in Reykjavik. “But I am not aware of higher estimates of magma flowing into a crack in the surface.”
Sigmundsson is part of a team that has been using ground-based sensors and satellites to monitor recent volcanic activity under the Reykjanes peninsula in Iceland. This began with magma accumulating several kilometres beneath the Svartsengi region, the site of a geothermal power plant that supplies warm water to the Blue Lagoon spa, a tourist attraction. READ MORE...
Tuesday, February 13
A Society Too Complex to Survive
Homo sapiens evolved as a separate species about 300,000 years ago. Measured in generations (with each generation lasting 20 years), that means there are about 15,000 great-great-etc. grandparents separating you from the earliest human ancestors.