Francis Dami
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An unidentified space object was observed "screaming" out of our galaxy at a speed of more than one million miles per hour.
Although our Sun appears to be the center of the universe, it is actually moving at a speed of around 500,000 miles per hour as it circles the Milky Way galaxy. That's quick, but it pales in comparison to a star runaway that was just found and is speeding across space.
By Francis Dami2 days ago in Futurism
Why persistent hammering does not cause brain damage in woodpeckers
Woodpeckers use incredible speed and force to drive their beaks into solid wood, striking tree trunks thousands of times every day. For many years, experts believed that their skulls buffered each impact like shock absorbers.
By Francis Dami2 days ago in Art
Earth has warmed considerably more quickly over the last 15 years, according to new analysis.
The Earth's temperature has been rising for decades due to global warming. However, recent studies indicate that during the previous ten years, the rate of warming may have accelerated.
By Francis Dami2 days ago in Earth
During profound sleep, breathing and brain signals become disorganised.
Researchers have shown that during the deepest stage of sleep, respiration and brain activity in important movement circuits become out of sync. This division changes how the sleeping brain interprets signals from the body and uncovers a secret deep rest rule.
By Francis Dami4 days ago in Humans
The next generation of dairy-free cheese may be made from rice.
Cheese is often the final "hard thing" to give up. Both vegans and others who wish to stay away from dairy because it bothers them miss it. The issue of allergies comes next. A lot of non-dairy cheeses contain gluten-based ingredients, and many rely on nuts. The "safe" options might quickly disappear if you have a gluten, dairy, or nut allergy.
By Francis Dami5 days ago in The Swamp
Researchers create a nanostring that may improve future sensors' sensitivity.
It has been demonstrated that a small on-chip string may transfer energy from its most basic vibration into multiple higher ones. That energy remained inside long enough to produce several signals from a single gadget rather of leaking directly into the surroundings.
By Francis Dami5 days ago in Futurism
The food business is undergoing a transformation thanks to gene-edited fungus, which is being considered as a beef substitute.
Compared to the strain now in use, a gene-edited fungus has created meat-like protein that grows more quickly and uses a lot less sugar. These improvements bring one of the earliest meat alternatives in the world closer to competing with animals in terms of scale and efficiency.
By Francis Dami5 days ago in Feast
Our knowledge of cancer and mental illness may be altered by a new atlas of foetal brain cell development.
Thousands of foetal brain starting cells have been linked by scientists to the precise neurones and support cells that these cells subsequently generated. As a result, brain development becomes a timed sequence that determines when tumor-like growth programs and risk-linked genes can become active.
By Francis Dami5 days ago in Motivation
The "most crucial" ages for human brain growth, maturity, intelligence, and general ability are four.
From the time of our birth until the very end of our lives, our brains undergo gradual changes. These shifts influence how we learn, think, remember, and react to the world. They might be gradual at times or abrupt at others.
By Francis Dami5 days ago in Families
Earth's vast chemical storehouse is being gathered by the Moon.
Despite its seeming permanence, Earth's atmosphere is gradually seeping into space. According to recent studies, part of that wasted air does not vanish. Rather, it wanders away and lands on the Moon, where it slowly builds up over billions of years in the lunar soil. Science and exploration both depend on this process.
By Francis Dami5 days ago in Futurism
The reason we move more quickly when we're excited could be explained by dopamine.
People frequently walk a little faster without realising it when they are enthusiastic or eager. According to a recent study, the brain's reward system could be the source of this extra "pep." It seems that this mechanism modifies our level of activity based on whether positive events occur as anticipated or come as a pleasant surprise.
By Francis Dami10 days ago in Families











