Novice - Znanost (angleščina) - New Scientist

NASA’s Artemis astronauts will try to grow plants on the moon
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Three experiments have been selected to fly to the moon alongside NASA’s Artemis III astronauts, all designed to help with future long-term stays on the moon and eventually Mars (New Scientist)
This robot predicts when you're going to smile – and smiles back
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An AI-powered robot named Emo watches people’s facial expressions and tries to match them, in an effort to make robots more relatable (New Scientist)
Some of the greatest cosmic discoveries have come about by accident
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The universe has been surprising us ever since we first looked into the cosmic darkness. We should embrace serendipity in science, says Chris Lintott (New Scientist)
Antibody therapy makes the immune systems of old mice young again
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A novel antibody therapy makes the immune system of old mice appear younger, allowing the animals to better fend off infections and reduce inflammation (New Scientist)
We've glimpsed something that behaves like a particle of gravity
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Gravitons, the particles thought to carry gravity, have never been seen in space – but something very similar has been detected in a semiconductor (New Scientist)
Is every species necessary or can we let some die out?
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There are thousands of species at risk of extinction, and we can’t save them all – how do conservationists think about which ones to focus on? (New Scientist)
Implantable battery is charged up by the body's oxygen supply
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Many medical implants run on batteries that need to be recharged, but what if you could do so just by breathing? (New Scientist)
New view of our galaxy's black hole reveals a swirling magnetic field
27. March 2024 (14:00)
The black hole at the centre of our galaxy, known as Sagittarius A*, has been captured in polarised light to reveal its magnetic field (New Scientist)
Most accurate clock ever can tick for 40 billion years without error
27. March 2024 (13:00)
The record for the most accurate clock has been broken in an experiment with strontium atoms almost as cold as absolute zero, and it is twice as accurate as any predecessor (New Scientist)
AI chatbots are improving at an even faster rate than computer chips
27. March 2024 (11:00)
The large language models behind AI chatbots are developing so rapidly that after eight months, a model only needs half the computing power to hit the same benchmark score - which is much faster than the rate at which computer chips improve (New Scientist)