Saturday, December 24, 2016

10 Top most favorite science news stories of 2016

10 Top most favorite science news stories of 2016


Plants that gamble. Floating creatures in the clouds of alien worlds. An ice-encased military base uncovered by climate change. Our favorite stories of 2016 didn’t necessarily employ the most cutting-edge science—for that, see our breakthroughs of the year—but they were fun, compelling reads that resonated widely with our audience here and on social media. Some of these were our personal favorites; some were our most popular stories of the year. Either way, we hope you’ll enjoy reading them again.

10. 'Undead' genes come alive days after life ends



Image: Dead animal.

Is death really the end? Not for some genes. This spooky story revealed that hundreds of genes turn on after an animal dies—and many are still active days after death. Even more disturbing, some of these genes are involved in sculpting a developing embryo.

9. Some fairy tales may be 6000 years old



Image: Some fairy tales may be 6000 years old.

Fairy tales existed long before the Brothers Grimm came around, but even literary scholars may be shocked by just how old some of our favorite stories are. Using methods typically employed by biologists to trace the evolutionary history of species, researchers found that some of the first fairy tales may have originated between 2500 and 6000 years ago. The key to a yarn’s longevity? A story that’s strange enough to be remembered, but not so strange as to defy comprehension.

8. Greenland shark may live 400 years, smashing longevity record



Image: Greenland shark may live 400 years, smashing longevity record

 “Astonishing.” That’s what scientists are saying about the life span of the Greenland shark, which new research reveals can live more than 400 years. The downside? Females aren’t ready to reproduce until they hit the ripe age of 156.

7. Plants can gamble, according to study



Image:  Plants can gamble, according to study

People do it. So do the birds and the bees. And now it appears that plants do it, too. Get your mind out of the gutter—we mean gambling. Our leafy friends, it turns out, roll the dice when it comes to making a tough decision such as where to find nutrients in uncertain circumstances. The findings need more testing, however, so don’t bring your favorite shrub to Las Vegas, Nevada, just yet.

6. Alien life could feed on cosmic rays



Image: Alien life could feed on cosmic rays

All life on Earth gets its energy either from the sun or by consuming organisms that do so. But would alien life do the same? A bizarre microbe found deep in a South African gold mine that gets energy from radioactive uranium suggests that life on other planets could feed off of this source as well, especially cosmic radiation raining down from space. In a somewhat related story—and one of our other favorites of the year—scientists found that alien life could thrive in the clouds of failed stars.

5. Humans are still evolving—and we can watch it happen



Image: Humans are still evolving—and we can watch it happen

Evolution doesn’t just happen over millions of years—it can occur right before our eyes. Such is the case in humans, where genes for height and eye color have evolved relatively rapidly—and a gene that favors cigarette smoking has dwindled in just a single generation.

4. You could probably have outrun a T. rex



Image: You could probably have outrun a T. rex

The Jurassic Park movies have made us fear dinosaurs all over again, but just how threatening was the infamous Tyrannosaurus rex? This story, concerning 66-million-year-old tracks found along an ancient shoreline in Wyoming, reveals that the beast may not have been able to run faster than 8 kilometers (or 5 miles) per hour. That’s slower than a middle-aged power walker, so with a bit of spring in your step, you probably could have avoided becoming a dino’s dinner.

3. Why did a humpback whale just save this seal's life?



Image: Why did a humpback whale just save this seal's life?

Nature may be red in tooth and claw, but sometimes species show a softer side toward each other. Our favorite example from this year was the remarkable story of a humpback whale that saved a seal from a pack of killer whales. Scientists aren’t sure why it happened, but at the very least they say it should make killer whales think twice about hunting when a humpback is nearby.

2. Mysterious, ice-buried Cold War military base may be unearthed by climate change



Image: Mysterious, ice-buried Cold War military base may be unearthed by climate change​

A military operation hidden beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet. A covert plan known as Project Iceworm. Rising international tensions. These may sound like the ingredients for a James Bond movie, but they’re the real-life details of a Cold War base known as Camp Century. And now a warming world may be bringing them all to light.

1. Why do our cell's power plants have their own DNA?



Image: Why do our cell's power plants have their own DNA?

Our most popular story of the year addresses one of the biggest mysteries of cell biology: Why do mitochondria—the oval-shaped structures that power our cells—have their own DNA, especially when the rest of the cell contains plenty of its own? A new study may hold the answers—and the clues to several rare and crippling diseases.

News Source : live-news24

Sunday, December 18, 2016

N Korea developing long-distance drone; Pentagon thinks as alarm

N Korea developing long-distance drone; Pentagon thinks as alarm


North Korea as it is known as a belligerent nation that defies the mightiest power in the world - the USA, now focuses on developing a long-endurance aerial drone with greater capabilities, South Korean media reports Sunday.

The Yonhap news agency said with advanced means of technologies Pyongyang is aiming to build long-endurance aerial drones to boost its weapons arsenal.

An official source said that the ‘unmanned aerial vehicle’ (UAV) in undergoing flight testing is larger than those currently in service in the North. Last week the North Korea’s Chosun Central TV had announced that the Kim Jong-un regime is set to unveil the latest version of the UAV.

The media outlet did not provide clear images of the actual drone but claimed to have tracking capabilities and the ability to carry out real-time observation. It also said the machine can be used to check the atmosphere, detect forest fires and observe fishing grounds.

South Korea estimates that the North has some 300 observation drones and around 10 that are war in some way armed having capability of conducting attacks with weapons. Past reports have shown that Pyongyang is even building a multipurpose UAV.

According to the International Business Time, without revealing the specifics of the operations Seoul had detected several such drones taking flight in 2016, said the official who did not want to be identified.

According to the RT online, Pyongyang unveiled its attack drone in 2013 on the 60th anniversary of the signing of the armistice that ended the Korean War.
South Korean military experts also say that the North may be upgrading drones that it brought in from China and the USSR in the past.

Local military experts also said that based on the information provided, the North may be upgrading drones it initially brought in from China and the Soviet Union in the past by making them bigger, heavier and more useful in terms of range and capabilities.

"The North clearly seems to be interested in building its own UAV to replace the old imported machines and copies of these drones that have crashed in South Korean territory in the past," a Korea Defense and Security Forum source said.

The South Korean military said at the end of November that it is building a device to counter the North’s drones called an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) – a high-powered, directional generator capable of disabling drones.

Meanwhile, Seoul is continuing to develop other anti-drone weapons, including a GPS jamming device and miniature rockets capable of taking down UAVs, according to Yonhap news agency.

South Korea has recently urged the military to initiate a new generation of defence systems to tackle North Korean drones. This includes using laser weapons to shoot down inbound aerial vehicles.

North Korea is known to have sent several drones, sometimes beyond its territorial airspace, as part of its activities. In the recent past, the South is believed to have detected incursions from Pyongyang-operated drones on at least five occasions but none of them were shot down.

Several suspected North Korean UAVs have been found in places like Paju, Baengnyeong Island and Samcheok in the past, although Pyongyang has denied ownership of such machines, reports the International Business Time online.

To counter such threats, South Korea is in the process of using concentrated electromagnetic pulse devices to disable and bring the drones down.

U.S. intelligence agencies say Pyongyang will likely conduct a new salvo of missile launches following the latest round of United Nations sanctions against the reclusive communist state, according to the Washington Post online.

The world organization on Dec. 1 imposed additional sanctions that seek to block North Korea’s revenue obtained from exports by 25 percent. The sanctions bar member-states from purchasing North Korean copper, nickel, silver and zinc exports, and the sale of large statues, a favored purchase for African dictators. The sanctions followed a recent North Korean underground nuclear test.

In the past, Pyongyang responded to similar sanctions with provocative missile launches.

The most recent missile test in North Korea was a failed launch of an intermediate-range ballistic missile called the Musudan in October with an estimated range of 2,000 miles.

The Pentagon and Japan took this development and capacity as alarm. Officials said the next missile test could be a Musudan launch to counteract the earlier test failure.

News Source : live-news24

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Sunday, December 11, 2016

Vaccine against diabetes has been officially announced

Vaccine against diabetes has been officially announced


Diabetes is an autoimmune disease when there is too much glucose in the blood. Finally the first-ever diabetes vaccine has been officially presented.Salvador C. Ramirez, president of the foundation Vive your Diabetes and Lucila Z. Ortega, the president of the Mexican Association for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Autoimmune Diseases elaborated that the vaccine cannot cure the disease, but it showed significant improvement in all of the cases.

For the first time, we’ve managed to standardize a saline solution for any type of diabetes, whether it is 1, 2, gestational or congenital However, this vaccine is not the cure for diabetes but a solution for the disease progression. It can be used both in children and adults and it does not cause side effects. The vaccine lasts for 60 days and the treatment is about one year. This vaccine is much more than a medicine; it is a medical practice that has turned into an alternative, a possible solution to stop the complications that are chronically degenerative: embolism, loss of ear; amputation, renal insufficiency and blindness.
Syria’s ancient city of Palmyra occupied by the IS

Syria’s ancient city of Palmyra occupied by the IS


Islamic State forces took control of Syria’s ancient city of Palmyra once again on Sunday, the second time they have claimed the city in days and more than eight months after the radical militia was ousted by government forces, a monitoring group reported.
Following four days of a wide-scale offensive, IS successfully captured the millennia-old oasis city of Palmyra in the eastern countryside of the central province of Homs, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The jihadis made a lightning-fast advance across the city after overrunning a northern neighborhood and capturing the famed citadel to Palmyra’s west.
The city as well as its airbase, ancient part and citadel fell to IS, said the Observatory.
It added that over 120 Syrian soldiers were killed during the offensive as well as tens of the IS militants.

Friday, December 9, 2016

How Adnan Sami lessen wight ? Get the Secrete !

How Adnan Sami lessen wight ? Get the Secrete !



Noted singer Adnan Sami recollects that his father’s words made him determined to lose weight, adding that weight loss involves 80 per cent psychological and 20 per cent physical effort.
 
Quoting the Pakistan-born singer Indian Express said ‘My father told me he doesn’t want me to die before him. That made me determined to lose weight. I shed 160 kg in six years.’
 
Sami, now an Indian citizen, came up with the statement while talking at a wellness event in Hyderabad, India on Tuesday.
 
Lahore-born Adnan recalled his father was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 1989, reports Indian Express.
 
‘He fought cancer but finally succumbed in 2009. During one of those years, while in London for a check-up, he insisted I also get a check-up done. After my check-up, the doctor pronounced before my father I won’t survive for long given my weight.’
 
‘My father then told me he won’t want me to die before him.’ That time his weight was 230 kg.
 
After that incident, Sami determined to shed his extra weihgt by any means. And within six years he shed 160 kg and finally overcome the ordeal to make his well wishers happy. 

News Source : ABnews24

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Quake strikes Indonesia killing nearly 100

Quake strikes Indonesia killing nearly 100



Nearly 100 people were killed and hundreds injured in Indonesia on Wednesday when a strong earthquake hit its Aceh province and rescuers used earth movers and bare hands to search for survivors in scores of toppled buildings.

Medical volunteers rushed in fading evening light to get people to hospitals, which were straining to cope with the influx of injured.

The Aceh provincial government said in a statement 93 people had died and more than 500 were injured, many seriously.

Motorcyclists pass a damaged section of a road following an earthquake in Meuredu, Pidie Jaya, in the northern province of Aceh, Indonesia, Dec 7, 2016 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Reuters

Motorcyclists pass a damaged section of a road following an earthquake in Meuredu, Pidie Jaya, in the northern province of Aceh, Indonesia, Dec 7, 2016 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Reuters

Sutopo Nugroho of Indonesia's national disaster management agency, said a state of emergency had been declared in Aceh, which sits on the northern tip of Sumatra island. "We are now focusing on searching for victims and possible survivors," said Nugroho. His agency put the death toll at 94.

People survey the damage after dozens of buildings collapsed following a 6.4 magnitude earthquake in Ule Glee, Pidie Jaya in the northern province of Aceh, Indonesia December 7, 2016. Reuters

People survey the damage after dozens of buildings collapsed following a 6.4 magnitude earthquake in Ule Glee, Pidie Jaya in the northern province of Aceh, Indonesia December 7, 2016. Reuters

Aceh was devastated by a massive earthquake and tsunami centered on its western coast near the provincial capital, Banda Aceh, on Dec. 26, 2004. That tsunami killed 226,000 people along Indian Ocean shorelines.

Officials urged people to sleep outdoors as twilight fell, in case aftershocks caused more damage to already precarious buildings.

President Joko Widodo was expected to visit the area on Thursday, his deputy told media

Wednesday's quake hit the east coast of the province, about 170 km (105 miles) from Banda Aceh. Nugroho said Aceh's Pidie Jaya regency, with a population of about 140,000, was worst hit.

News Source : The Financial Express