Science & TechnologyS


Pharoah

'Internet of Bodies may lead to Internet of Brains' by 2050: RAND

digital brain
© image by kjpargeter [cropped] on Freepik
Transhumanism may lead to super-human capabilities for some & mind control for others: perspective

The Internet of Bodies ecosystem may lead to the Internet of Brains sometime between 2035 and 2050, according to a UK Defence-commissioned RAND report.
"An 'internet of bodies' may also ultimately lead to an 'internet of brains', i.e. human brains connected to the internet to facilitate direct brain-to-brain communication and enable access to online data networks"

RAND Corporation, March 2024
Commissioned by the UK Defence Science and Technology Laboratory and conducted by RAND Europe and Frazer Nash Consulting, the study "Cultural and technological change in the future information environment" looks at six technologies and information environments and their implications for British defense.

Comet 2

The 'Devil Comet' is now a naked eye object

Suddenly, amateur astronomers are seeing a naked-eye comet in the evening sky. It's Comet 12P/Pons-Brooks, also known as the 'devil comet'. Waiting for next Monday's solar eclipse in Mexico, Petr Horálek photographed the comet last night and found it much brighter than the last time he saw it:

Devil Comet
© Petr Horálek/Institute of Physics in OpavaTaken by Petr Horálek/Institute of Physics in Opava on April 4, 2024 @ Veľká Lomnica, Slovakia; Monterrey, Mexico
"I assume an outburst is in progress," says Horálek. "My estimate of the comet's magnitude is +3.5. Definitely worth taking a look in the next hours and days."

Indeed, now is a good time to look. After sunset, the comet emerges in the western sky not far from the planet Jupiter. Naked-eye observers will see a dim fuzzball. Cameras and small telescopes reveal the comet's magnificent tail.

Satellite

Event Horizon Telescope reveals strong magnetic fields spiraling at the edge of Milky Way's central black hole

magnetic lines of force black hole event horizon
© EHT CollaborationThe Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) collaboration has captured a new view of the massive object at the center of our Galaxy: how it looks in polarized light. The lines mark the orientation of polarization, which is related to the magnetic field around the shadow of the black hole.
The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) collaboration, who produced the first ever image of our Milky Way black hole released in 2022, has captured a new view of the massive object at the center of our Galaxy: how it looks in polarized light. This is the first time astronomers have been able to measure polarization, a signature of magnetic fields, this close to the edge of Sagittarius A*. This image shows the polarized view of the Milky Way black hole. The lines mark the orientation of polarization, which is related to the magnetic field around the shadow of the black hole. Credit: EHT Collaboration

A new image from the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) collaboration — which includes scientists from the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) — has uncovered strong and organized magnetic fields spiraling from the edge of the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*).

Seen in polarized light for the first time, this new view of the monster lurking at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy has revealed a magnetic field structure strikingly similar to that of the black hole at the center of the M87 galaxy, suggesting that strong magnetic fields may be common to all black holes. This similarity also hints toward a hidden jet in Sgr A*.

Butterfly

Speed of visual perception ranges widely in humans, new study reveals

eye hummingbird
© Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
Using a blink-and-you'll-miss-it experiment, researchers from Trinity College Dublin have discovered that individuals differ widely in the rate at which they perceive visual signals. Some people perceive a rapidly changing visual cue at frequencies that others cannot, which means some access more visual information per timeframe than others.

This discovery suggests some people have an innate advantage in certain settings where response time is crucial, such as in ball sports, or in competitive gaming.

The rate with which we perceive the world is known as our "temporal resolution," and in many ways it is similar to the refresh rate of a computer monitor.

Comment: See also: Confirmed: The Eye Emits Actual Light (Biophotons)


Magnify

Scientists search for mysterious 'ghost particles'

graphic ghost particles physics
© VICTOR de SCHWANBERG/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYGhost particles can't currently be detected
Some physicists have long suspected that mysterious 'ghost' particles in the world around us could greatly advance our understanding of the true nature of the Universe.

Now scientists think they've found a way to prove whether or not they exist.

Europe's centre for particle research, Cern, has approved an experiment designed to find evidence for them.

The new instrument will be a thousand times more sensitive to such particles than previous devices.

It will smash particles into a hard surface to detect them instead of against each other like Cern's main device the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).

Sun

Why NASA will fire three rockets at the solar eclipse

eclipse
NASA has announced it will fire three scientific sounding rockets into the moon's shadow on Monday, April 8 during a partial solar eclipse across North America.

In what will be a total solar eclipse for a 115 miles-wide path through parts of Mexico, 15 U.S. states and Canada and a partial solar eclipse for the entire Americas, the event will see a sudden drop in sunlight.

Serpent Deity

The space agency's project, Atmospheric Perturbations Around The Eclipse Path, will investigate how that drop in sunlight and temperature affects Earth's upper atmosphere. APEP is named after the serpent deity from ancient Egyptian mythology, nemesis of the sun deity Ra, according to NASA.

NASA's suborbital rockets won't launch into totality. Instead they'll go from Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Virginia, from where 81% of the sun will be blocked by the moon. That moment will happen at 15:33 EST, though the eclipse will take part between 14:06 and 16:33.


Comment: Three rockets at 3:33. NASA sure likes its occult symbolism!


Comment: Scientists will be firing up CERN at the same time.


Magnify

Wild bird seen to gesture "after you"

japanese tit gestures mate
© Suzuki and Sugita, 2024/ Current BiologyA Japanese tit bringing food to its nest
A small-bird species, the Japanese tit (Parus minor), uses wing movements as a gesture to convey the message "after you," according to new research at the University of Tokyo. When a mating pair arrives at their nest box with food, they will wait outside on perches. One will then often flutter its wings toward the other, apparently indicating for the latter to enter first. The researchers say that this discovery challenges the previous belief that gestural communication is prominent only in humans and great apes, significantly advancing our understanding of visual communication in birds.

A thumbs up, waving goodbye or pointing out a book on a shelf. These gestures and many more are an integral part of how we communicate. Such gestures were once thought to be used exclusively by humans, until closer observations of great apes, such as chimpanzees and bonobos, revealed that they too move their bodies to communicate nonverbally. In more recent years, studies on other animals, such as ravens and fish, have shown that they also use some simple gestures to, for example, point out objects or show something of interest, called deictic gesturing. However, symbolic gestures, such as showing an open hand to signal "after you," require complex cognitive skills, and there was no conclusive evidence supporting the existence of such abilities in animals other than humans.

Bulb

Younger generations have larger brains, but is that healthier?

brain scan
© (feellife/Getty Images)
The size of the human brain may be gradually increasing over time, and that could reduce the risk of dementia in younger generations, according to new research.

The study imaged the brains of more than 3,000 Americans, between the ages of 55 and 65, and found that those born in the 1970s have a 6.6 percent greater overall brain volume than those born in the 1930s.

Members of Generation X also had a nearly 8 percent greater volume of white matter and an almost 15 percent greater volume of gray matter surface area than the members of the Silent Generation.

One specific part of the brain, called the hippocampus, which plays a major role in memory and learning, expanded by 5.7 percent in volume over the successive generations studied.

Fireball

Rare asteroids showing strange 'activity' are challenging existing theories about solar system

comet tail
© Colin Orion Chandler/University of Washingtona comet tail coming from Asteroid 2015 VA108, one of the active asteroids spotted by volunteers from NASA’s “Active Asteroids” Citizen Science project.
Fifteen rare asteroids showcasing very unusual "active" properties have been detected as part of an ongoing international volunteer effort to unravel the mysteries of a peculiar variety of space objects.

The asteroids were spotted amid 430,000 images during an effort comprising more than 8000 volunteers who scoured images from the Dark Energy Camera, or DECam, on Chile's Victor M. Blanco telescope.

Founded by Colin Orion Chandler, Ph.D., a University of Washington and DiRAC Institute scientist, the Active Asteroids project continues to leverage the work of volunteers in its ongoing search for asteroids possessing these unusual properties.

What makes these "active" objects so rare is that they possess traits that blur the lines between asteroids and other kinds of celestial objects, as some of them possess tails like comets, while others are enveloped in pockets of dust or gas.

Since their first discovery in 1949, only a few dozen of the rare asteroids have ever been discovered.

According to NASA, the properties these objects display challenge our conventional ideas about objects in the solar system, and present opportunities for new insights about the behavior and origins of these rare "active" asteroids.

Comment: James McCanney's electric model may account for this strangeness:
As a comet's orbit becomes circular (due to tail drag), it stops moving through the differently charged areas around the Sun, remaining in one region of electrical equipotential, thus losing its visibly charged tail. In essence, it evolves into an asteroid or potential moon in a stable orbit, its fiery early years over.
In other words, asteroids are just "dead" comets.


Bulb

Moonlight found to have a curious effect on coral reef activity

coral reef
© (IBorisoff/iStock/Getty Images Plus)
The Moon influences life here on Earth more than you might realize - and that includes shifting the sounds coming from coral reefs, which indicates changes in ecosystem activity, according to a new study.

Every coral reef has its own soundscape, created by the activities of fish and other organisms as they move about the reef. Scientists can use this background hum to keep a check on what's happening around the coral.

Here, researchers from the Naval Undersea Warfare Center (NUWC), and the Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy (ARPA-E) in the US, found that the underwater din changed rapidly as the Moon rose and set.

Comment: Interestingly, back in 2016, a study revealed that trees were found to 'rest' their branches at nighttime:
The drooping effect is probably caused by loss of internal water pressure within plant cells, a phenomenon called turgor pressure. "It means branches and leaf stems are less rigid, and more prone to drooping under their own weight," says Zlinszky.

The trees may also be "resting" their branches. During the day, branches and leaves are angled higher, allowing leaves to catch more sunlight, because there's less self-shading from leaves above. But this is energy-intensive and serves no purpose at night, when there's no light.

So is the drooping deliberate, dictated by an active sleep-night cycle, or passive, dictated by differences in the availability of water and light? "This remains to be decided," says Zlinszky.