Science

C4RP3_N0CT3M, in Pandemic deaths in Ohio and Florida show partisan divide after vaccine rollout

"The researchers did not have complete data—the linked data didn't contain a cause of death or vaccination status." Hmm, mighty bold claim there guys.

jeffw,

Here’s the thing about excess mortality during COVID… most of it was from COVID

kabe,
@kabe@lemmy.world avatar

You missed an important bit:

But, they could evaluate excess weekly deaths by age, state, county, and party affiliation. They found that the gap in excess deaths was larger in counties with lower vaccination rates, suggesting that lack of vaccination among Republican voters may partly explain the higher death rates.

AnneKitsune, in Detransitioned boy castrated by doctors warns kids about perils of gender ideology: 'Patient for life'

delete this shit

jungekatz, in Detransitioned boy castrated by doctors warns kids about perils of gender ideology: 'Patient for life'

Looks fake and transphobic ! Been seeing lods of conservative muricans in here just in a day

tekchic,

Yeah it seems like there’s been a big influx. I wish they’d just go live on Truth Social or something. I don’t want to see that crap here.

eleitl, in Detransitioned boy castrated by doctors warns kids about perils of gender ideology: 'Patient for life'

Mods, please kill this.

Heresy_generator, in Detransitioned boy castrated by doctors warns kids about perils of gender ideology: 'Patient for life'
Heresy_generator avatar

Isn't it weird how knee replacement surgery has a dissatisfactory rate 100x that of gender transition surgery but Fox News doesn't write any articles about the millions of people that are dissatisfied with their new knees?

lowdownfool,
lowdownfool avatar

It's not scary like choppin' off yer pee-pee, hee hawwww!

4am, in 'Breakthrough' geothermal tech produces 3.5 megawatts of carbon-free power | Engadget
@4am@lemmy.world avatar

So, it’s fracking?

readbeanicecream,
readbeanicecream avatar

@4am Sorta, but not really.

Geothermal energy production involves the extraction of hot water or steam from underground reservoirs. This water or steam is then used to drive turbines that generate electricity. No oil is extracted, just hot water or steam.

https://images.immediate.co.uk/production/volatile/sites/4/2021/12/geothermal-00eef72.jpg?quality=90&resize=700,457

The article states:

For a natural geothermal system to produce electricity, it needs a combination of heat, fluid and rock permeability, as Bloomberg notes. In many areas, the rock has the required levels of heat, but not enough permeability for fluid to flow through it.

An EGS creates this permeability artificially by drilling deep underground and injecting fluid to create fractures in the rock. That approach can vastly increase the number of potential sites for a geothermal power plant.

Basically, they are creating extra cracks to assist with waterflow.

jimbolauski,

Fracking is a technique of creating extra cracks in rock using pressurized fluid. They are fracking to increase permeability.

readbeanicecream, in An invasive fish with teeth, that can breathe air, live up to three days outside of water, move short distances on land, and grow three feet long has been found in Louisiana
readbeanicecream avatar

Snakeheads are from Asia and were brought to the U.S. as part of the aquarium trade and aquaculture. "They're considered to be good table fare," Bourgeois says. "The biologist up in Arkansas said he prefers them to catfish."

Officials have also tried saying this about Silver Jumping Carp and Nutria. It did not catch on...not sure it will with snakeheads.

GlennMagusHarvey,
@GlennMagusHarvey@mander.xyz avatar

We should definitely consider eating invasive species. This includes iguanas in Florida, as well as blue catfish in the Chesapeake Bay.

sleet01,
@sleet01@lemmy.ca avatar

Nutria… the giant swamp rat?

readbeanicecream,
readbeanicecream avatar
sleet01,
@sleet01@lemmy.ca avatar

Truly we live in the greatest country on Earth /s -_-;

Oyster_Lust, in An invasive fish with teeth, that can breathe air, live up to three days outside of water, move short distances on land, and grow three feet long has been found in Louisiana
@Oyster_Lust@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve seen “Snakehead Terror”. Those things are monsters.

usrix, in Study suggests universe is twice as old as presumed
usrix avatar

https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/universe-13-8-or-26-7-billion-years/

Tired light theory requires:

  1. Distant galaxies to be blurry (they aren’t)
  2. Events in faraway galaxies to happen at the same pace as nearby events (they don’t. Time is dialated just like frequency is redshifted)
  3. Cosmic background radiation would not be a black body
  4. Constants c, G, and hbar would change through the history of the universe.
D-ISS-O-CIA-TED,

This was the perfect article to help me finally understand how it all worked. I'm now convinced that tired light isn't a real phenomenon - thanks for sharing!

Orbitrix, in New research puts age of universe at 26.7 billion years, nearly twice as old as previously believed

Is this related to the recent articles about how the "speed of the passing of time" has actually changed over time? Not sure if I understood all that correctly but I remember wondering if it was going to mess with carbon dating and estimates of the age of the universe

lol3droflxp, in A break from the lawn: can an iconic meadow seed wider change?
lol3droflxp avatar

Hopefully, lawns look boring at best. This would be a valuable change for insects.

markdevries, in Scientists discover huge, heat-emitting blob on the far side of the moon
@markdevries@mstdn.social avatar

@Arotrios Isn’t that where the nazis went after WWII?

Iron Sky (2012)
https://m.imdb.com/title/tt1034314/

tissek, in Polynesians steering by the stars met Native Americans long before Europeans arrived
@tissek@ttrpg.network avatar

Stefan Milo published a video not too long ago where he interviewed Andrés Moreno-Estrada (mentioned in the article) and Alexander Ioannidis on this topic. It’s a good easy to follow along video covering the topic.

Lenguador, in Artificial Muscles Flex for the First Time: Ferroelectric Polymer Innovation in Robotics
Lenguador avatar

So, taking the average bicep volume as 1000cm3, this muscle could: exert 1 tonne of force, contact 8% (1.6cm for a 20cm long bicep), and require 400kV and must be above 29 degrees Celcius.

Maybe someone with access to the paper can double check the math and get the conversion efficiency from electrical to mechanical.

I expect there's a good trade-off to be made to lower the force but increase the contraction and lower the voltage. Possibly some kind of ratcheting mechanism with tiny cells could be used to overcome the crazy high voltage requirement.

CaptainPatent, in Anti-ageing protein injection boosts monkeys’ memories (news article & attached research article)

This is definitely interesting... However I would caveat this with the fact that in the past, Nature & Science have both previously published more than their fair share of studies that would later be retracted for lack of reproducibility.

Most of this is due to the fact that when you're a publication on the bleeding edge and there's a lot of mid-term name and career recognition that comes with being published there, there's also a higher level of academic fraud that can happen to get there.

I would keep a cautious eye out for retractions as well as labs that attempt to reproduce results... I also want to dig deeper and see if the mouse studies done had replication attempts by different labs as well and I won't have a ton of time to do that today, but regardless it's certainly a potentially a large breakthrough in cognition if it holds up.

zlatiah,
zlatiah avatar

Definitely. I just found the whole thing odd tbh... First of all, Nature is extremely rigorous with their review (because they only publish highly novel/interesting findings and is very thus susceptible to fraudulent stuff). Yet this paper passed for a Nature-branded journal (albeit a newer one, I think Nature Aging is only like 1yr old or sth) with doing only one experiment (a monkey trial), and they don't even know what this "klotho" thing is... My suspicion is that the aging field is just too small so Nature Aging is lowering their standards? They've accepted less than stellar works before too.

The results seem fine to me & I really hope this is something real since I'm also studying aging, but as someone with some medicinal chemistry training... Nothing is confirmed until you get a positive phase 2 clinical trial result, otherwise we'd have cured all cancer and Alzheimer's a long time ago lol... I'm not putting my eggs in this basket just yet

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