You read it right. A company is planning to put up a snow park in Florida and they have already received approval from the Board of County Commissioners on the project. It seems far-fetched but the people at Point Summit Incorporated are looking to make it happen. Read more about it on Your Mileage May Vary.
After taking the first photo of an actual black hole, the Event Horizon Telescope collaborators have all been recognized with the 2020 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics and received the $3 million prize for the work they did on the EHT.
The EHT is a network of eight radio dishes in Antarctica, Chile, Mexico, Hawaii, Arizona and Spain that creates an Earth-sized interferometer. Its ultra-high angular resolution images of radio emission from a supermassive black hole at the heart of galaxy M87* opened a new window on black holes and other phenomena.
Recently, a team at Brookhaven National Laboratory used the EHT image to disfavour “fuzzy” models of ultra-light boson dark matter.
Making something a habit or routine could be difficult when you're just starting out. But at some point, it becomes such a part of your daily life that it would feel like you're lacking something when you skip a day.
In the case of David Martin, he has flown every day for 1,826 days, which is quite a feat and a record-setter as well. Know more about his story and how he was able to achieve this record on Air Space Mag.
David Martin has always loved to fly. From the time he got his pilot’s license, at 17, he knew that flying for him was more than a casual pastime.
He loved it so much that, even as a teenager, he started thinking about what it would be like to fly every day—for a whole year. In 2014, he decided to find out. He flew every day that year, and the next year, and the next.
One of the most tragic things that could happen to someone is to slowly lose their memories, which is what happens to people with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.
Having your cognitive function, sense of self, awareness of your surroundings, and the ability to recall important events or memories in your life can be agonizing. It is disheartening.
One very encouraging development has come out of the work done by Dr. Chang Yi Wang, PhD. Wang is a prolific bio-inventor; one of her biggest successes is developing a foot-and-mouth vaccine for pigs that has been administered more than three billion times.
In January, United Neuroscience, a biotech company founded by Yi, her daughter Mei Mei Hu, and son-in-law, Louis Reese, announced the first results from a phase IIa clinical trial on UB-311, an Alzheimer’s vaccine.
Vehicular traffic and road congestion have been an issue ever since the first cars were mass produced. In Paris, the problem grew so unbearable in the 1920s that they launched a competition wherein people submitted proposals to ease congestion.
With the help of the father of the Paris metro system, Fulgence Bienvenüe, the Office des inventions was tasked with examining the projects.
Of the 38 proposals from engineers, 25 were eliminated outright and 13 were examined. The expert report by Mr. Ott, the head engineer of the Paris metro's technical service, left just two projects on the list.
These projects involved moving walkways with two systems. Two prototypes were built and tested at the Office nationale de recherche scientifique et industrielle et des inventions at Meudon.
The first system, called "arbres cannelés" (ribbed shafts), used "parallel bands at graded speeds," similar to the platforms that operated at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago (1892) and the Exposition Universelle in Paris (1900).
The second was a system using "belts" and "single direction of traffic": it operated in stations and was equipped with special devices for loading and unloading passengers. It was equipped with a starter and a decelerator for transitioning by stages up to the speed of 15 km/h.
On the evening of August 30, the police responded to an emergency call and they went to the Osaka home of Kazuya Ogawa. Upon arriving there, they were confronted by a horrifying scene: there was Ogawa’s wife who was found lying on the floor in the bedroom of their two daughters, 5-year-old Risa, and 3-year-old Juri. All of them have sustained serious stab wounds.
The two girls were rushed to hospital but were later pronounced dead. Ogawa’s 40-year-old wife underwent treatment for knife wounds to her abdomen and was reported to be in a stable condition.
There were no signs of forced entry into the house, and nothing was stolen, which led the police to conclude that the mother stabbed her daughters to death and tried to commit suicide after. The question is: why?
In recent years, there has been a growing number of cases in which children were harmed by their own parents or guardians. The killings of Risa and Juri Ogawa, however, were “the first in a series of similar attacks across Japan by middle-aged mothers on their own children,” which leave experts baffled.
“It’s complicated,” admits Fujiko Yamada, who set up the Child Maltreatment Prevention Centre 21 years ago and agrees that the number of cases being dealt with by police appears to be rising inexorably.
[...]
“There are many reasons why we’re seeing more children being hurt, but a big one is domestic violence between couples,” Yamada told the South China Morning Post.
Many women who are victims of physical abuse at the hands of their partner tend to try to shake it off and play down the problem – even when one incident becomes a regular occurrence, Yamada says. Women who are exposed to such violence in the family have a tendency to then become violent with their own children.
Yamada also states other factors which could lead violence against children.
Check out these dinner recipes which only take five or fewer ingredients but still look like expensive dishes you order at restaurants. What’s more, if ever you have leftovers, you can eat them at lunch the next day as they store well!
It turns out that cats love us humans more than we thought. According to a recently published research from Oregon State University, cats form close emotional attachments to people who take care of them, similar to what babies and dogs do. But cat owners already know this, and The Guardian asked their readers to tell them their experiences when they realized that their pets loved them very much.
For one Twitter user, Fletch Williams, it was when her cat “brought me a tissue when I was sick in bed. Something he did only a few times, and never when I was well.” Elizabeth Booth, 60, from Kettering, Northamptonshire, says her black-and-white cat, Billy, would “stroke my hand with his paw while he lay outstretched next to me on the sofa”.
Many readers say their cats helped them through heartbreak or grief. “My boyfriend broke up with me when I was 16,” says Ludovica from Italy. “My cat came to me while I was crying alone in the house. She licked the tears on my face and then curled up on my lap. I really appreciated it.”
How about you? Do you have moments with your pet similar to these ones?
It is inadvisable to mess with Mother Nature. It is something we humans have known for quite a while. Some researchers from the Russian Geographical Society learned a new lesson during their expedition in the Arctic Ocean: don’t mess with a mother walrus either, or you’ll face undesirable consequences.
The scientists were aboard a Russian Navy tugboat known as the Altai on an expedition to the Franz Josef Land archipelago in the Arctic Ocean this week right before the unusual human-animal interaction occurred. They boarded a small rubber landing craft and were en route to the shore to study its flora and fauna when a female walrus attacked, sinking the vessel.
"During the landing at Cape Heller, a group of researchers had to flee from a female walrus, which, protecting its cubs, attacked an expedition boat," the Russian Military's Northern Fleet said in a press release.
J. Kenji López-Alt is mostly a stay-at-home dad responsible for all the meals in his household. As an essential part of his planning, he relies on a supply of boiled eggs in the refrigerator.
During one of the years in his egg-citing cooking adventures, he became curious and asked himself, “What's the best way to boil an egg?” This question would then lead to a multi-decade endeavor.
Night vision goggles are amazing, but they're also bulky, limit your field of vision, and require electricity. What if you could just inject the ability directly into your eyeballs? Would you do it?
Research from the University of Massachusetts Medical School suggests that may be a possibility. Popular Mechanics reports:
In a study from the University of Massachusetts Medical School, researchers injected nanoparticles that converted infrared light into visible light into the eyes of mice. Those mice were then placed in a maze along with mice who didn't receive the injections, and were able to find their way out of the maze. The nanoparticles bound to the photoreceptors of the mice's eyes and provided night vision for up to 10 weeks without any ill effects.
Can we transfer this technology to humans?
Xue Tian, a scientist based in China, is quoted as saying he “definitely” thought it would work in humans.
Breeding and raising hundreds of thousands of mosquitoes seems like a crazy idea. I mean, there's already a lot of mosquitoes around bringing death everywhere. But researchers from the Oregon Health and Science University just opened a mosquito facility in order to advance malaria research.
Located in the basement of a research building, the facility has three areas, all of which are separated by safety doors. Scientists first enter a small area called an ante-room, which is largely empty and separates the facility from the outside world. Researchers then pass into the main area, where rodents and non-flying larvae and pupae mosquitos will be kept for malaria research.
Through a reinforced screen door is the interior barrier room, where mosquitoes infected with malaria are kept in climate-controlled incubators inside multiple screened barriers. The insects are kept at 78.8 degrees Fahrenheit and at 75% humidity, mimicking the mosquito’s native environment.
The facility is carefully designed to prevent mosquitoes from escaping. But local residents need not worry about such an unlikely event. Wilder raises an African species of the Anopheles mosquito that can’t survive in Oregon’s temperate climate. Only specially trained OHSU staff are allowed to enter.
Scientists hope that with this new facility they will be able to develop a vaccine that would have a long-lasting effect against malaria.
I'm sometimes unaware of my own surroundings, so there have been times when I walked toward a pole or bumped my head on a low-hanging beam. And since I'm also a bit clumsy, I sometimes hurt myself when I drop things or when close the drawers and closets.
But there are several surprising ways that one who's over 40 can injure themselves. McSweeneys lists them here.
The room is aptly called the “Room of Horrors” where guests can adjust the dial on the room’s wall, which in turn adjusts the level of uncanny occurrences in the room. The room of horrors is one of the many odd rooms that Mysterious Lodging offers, with a total of 11 themed rooms, each costing 7,500 yen (US$70) per night. Mysterious Lodging has a game themed room, a room where you can rock climb (Room of Regeneration), and a room where you can commune with a famous samurai, to name a few. If you’d like to spice up your vacation in Japan, why not give the lodging a try!