The SRK Science Thread 2.0

Leslie Baugh is the first shoulder-level double amputee to wear and control two complex, mind-controlled prosthetic limbs. In order to prepare his body for the devices, Baugh underwent a surgery called targeted muscle reinnervation. The procedure redirected nerves that once controlled his limbs to interact with the prosthetics.

Next, he trained on a computer, working with virtual models as pattern recognition software learned to apply signals from his brain to his intended movements. Then, Johns Hopkins researchers fitted him with a personalized socket to hold the prostheses to his body and translate his mental controls.

Source: Popular Science

The future is now even more. In less than a decade we have fully functioning prosthetics

We’ve had them for a while: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/03/140306095121.htm http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/05/140508141745.htm It’s just that the tech is becoming cheaper/more practical.
Moore’s Law is a funny thing.

Danish discovery raises hopes for a cancer cure

http://i.imgur.com/BlqbZqs.png

Seawater to drinkable water
http://www.coolthings.com/cheaper-faster-desalination-process/
Birth control for men
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-10-scientists-potential-birth-pill-men.html
THC from yeast
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/15/science/newly-risen-from-yeast-thc.html?_r=0
3D printer sternum and ribs
http://www.cnet.com/news/cancer-patient-receives-3d-printed-sternum-ribs/
First space grown food
http://www.universetoday.com/121798/yummy-iss-astronauts-eat-first-space-grown-food/
Seaweed that tastes like bacon
http://time.com/3960421/seaweed-bacon-dulse-kale-super-food/
Space-time near Earth
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2011/04may_epic/
Tattoo removal cream
http://globalnews.ca/news/1832096/halifax-student-develops-tattoo-removal-cream/
New antibiotic
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/11331174/First-new-antibiotic-in-30-years-discovered-in-major-breakthrough.html
First artificial heart transplant
http://www.medicaldaily.com/woman-receives-first-successful-heart-transplant-using-experimental-artificial-heart-341182
Wasp venom destroys cancer cells
http://phys.org/news/2015-09-brazilian-wasp-venom-cancer-cells.html
Stem cells helps MS
http://www.healthline.com/health-news/stem-cell-transplants-first-ms-treatment-reverses-disability-012215
Blood testing for every virus ever contracted
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-brief/2015/06/04/blood-test-virus/#.VjIZAberTDc
Foam that slows bleeding
http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/pressroom/presspacs/2015/acs-presspac-june-24-2015/sprayable-foam-that-slows-bleeding-could-save-lives.html
Computer that runs on water
http://www.sciencealert.com/engineers-have-created-a-computer-that-operates-on-water-droplets
Crashing a probe into asteroid
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3255156/The-experiment-save-Earth-Researchers-crash-probe-asteroid-try-alter-course.html
MircoRNA helps slow/reverse cancer
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/science-news/11821334/Cancer-cells-programmed-back-to-normal-by-US-scientists.html
New treatment for brain cancer
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/09/150921153501.htm

Keep “crafting” and that kinda boring collect things stuff out of new Fallouts, add shelters for these and stories around them.

In February of 2015, the San Diego Frozen Zoo announced that they plan to use the stored DNA from the Northern White rhino to bring back this species from the brink of extinction. According to the World Wildlife Fund, only 4 northern white rhinos, all of which are in captivity, remain.

Gene manipulated white blood cells used to cure cancer in baby

News article on Li-Fi, an emerging technology similar to Wi-Fi, but uses visible light instead of microwaves.

My thoughts:

Li-Fi will get you high network speed, but you’ll still need a fibre optic Internet connection if you want Gbps-level Internet speed. Li-Fi and Wi-Fi are ways to connect to a LAN, but your router can still only connect to the Internet via broadband/fibre optics.

Also, Wi-Fi uses microwaves, which can travel a good distance through walls and obstructions. Visible light is blocked by everything opaque. You’d need a lot of overhead Li-Fi transceivers to make sure devices don’t get blocked out of the network too easily.

Spoiler

Also, if you accidentally place your thumb over your phone’s Li-Fi transceiver? LOL

University of Chicago news article on room-temperature macroscopic quantum entanglement.

How it was done:

Possible applications:

My thoughts:

It’s interesting. I don’t yet understand how entanglement can improve sensors, but the article suggests it can be used to improve MRI scanning. I’m guessing they can create two entangled electrons inside an MRI probe, conduct one of them into a neuron, and conduct the other one out of the body, like so (excuse my Paint skills):

When you measure the electron that went out of the body, it should have information about the other electron. You could probably learn something about the neuron this way.

Might make laser tag, 5.0

Shoot Internet at people. Beat it, phone flashlights.

(Hecatom will use it to megaphone gifs/webm/flv+gifv 100MB/s at us.)

! Can you turn off the overhead light in your airplane seat? Nope, I want to watch my movie because your in flight choices suck! And we’re on our way to beaming up Scotties. :tup:

Hubble Space Telescope news article on a supernova in 2014 being visible again in 2016 because of gravitational lensing.

How it will happen:

My thoughts:

It’s interesting. The article says it’s a chance for astronomers to verify their understanding of galaxies and their gravitational lensing effects. I think it’s also a nice way to learn more about dark matter in the magnifying-glass galaxy; apparent position measurements of the galaxy and the supernova can tell us something about the mass (some of it supposed to be from dark matter) that’s causing the lensing effect.

University of Arizona news article on the first ever photo of a forming planet.

Photo:

Photo explanation:

Two independent Ph.D. candidates looked at the star LkCa15. One of them used the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) in Arizona, the other used the university’s Magellan Telescope with adaptive optics (MagAO).

**Blue spots: **The LBT looked at infrared readings from the star (blue spots in the image) and found a glowing object near the star – almost indisputably a forming planet.

**Red and green spots: **The MagAO looked at H-alpha readings from the star (green and red spots in the image) and found the same thing.
H-alpha explanation: [details=Spoiler]

[/details]

**White spots: **The large white spots in the image are left-over material from the formation of the star.

My thoughts:

The technology is amazing. The star is 450 light years away. The telescopes and techniques they used must have been very precise to resolve a star and a planet close to each other.

It’s also cool that the researchers were grad students. Kudos to them. :tup:

News article on a supermassive black hole eating up a star and spitting out high-speed jets of matter.

What we found:

My thoughts:

Very interesting. The article says this data is important since we don’t know what happens when a star falls into a black hole. This is a good first step. It would be nice to find other stars like this, but finding just one is lucky enough.

I especially interested in what happens to the core of the star upon reaching the event horizon; whether it exhausts its fuel trying to stabilize itself or gets converted into something else due to the immense gravitational distortion.

**DIABETES DRUG METFORMIN COULD INCREASE HUMAN LIFESPAN TO 120 YEARS
**

Although this isn’t the first time I’ve heard of such wonder drugs, due to the extensive use and availability of it, I think it would be pretty awesome if the trials show that it is safe and viable for non-diabetics.

Not only is it expected to make you live longer but also improve your health, so hopefully we won’t be bedridden super-centenarian zombies.

Oh interesting, I didn’t think about that. I’ll read more about this. I can’t do the math myself, GR is way too tedious.

Wow, 120-year lifespan? But right now it’s just a value extrapolated from animal trials. Human testing is close, though, so we’ll find out soon enough.

@Kashiyukasthighs
@pedoviejo

Our posts got buried in the lounge, so I’m replying here.

I didn’t think of that. I don’t know what would happen.

My solution would involve vector rotations. I know of two ways to do it:

(a) Straight up vector algebra/calculus.
Technical stuff:

[details=Spoiler]We know that an inverse-square law will produce an elliptical orbit.

Equation: [details=Spoiler]

[/details]

Treat this as a vector in polar coordinates. For our nested-orbits problem, we need two of those vectors (excuse my Paint skills):

All we have to do is take the vector sum: easy!

BUT (!!!) the two vectors are rotating. We have to apply a rotation to the vectors, which I only know how to do in Cartesian coordinates. In Clifford algebra, to apply a rotation, we have to multiply by a certain exponential in a certain way:

Spoiler

http://s7.postimg.org/gqjwzw23f/Clifford_algebra_rotation.png

Then you just add the two vectors. By this time, the two would have become complicated expressions.

This solution is intuitive to set up (take two vectors, apply a rotation, add them together) but a bitch to solve (vector sums, exponentials, variables in the denominator).
[/details]

(b) Matrix rotation operators.
Technical stuff:

[details=Spoiler]Like in the first solution, we need to set up two vectors. Only this time, we do it with column-matrix vectors.

Spoiler

http://s17.postimg.org/fcpiq7a17/column_vector.png

We do the same procedure: take the two vectors, apply a rotation, add them together.

To apply a rotation, we have to multiply by a rotation matrix, such that:

Spoiler

http://s24.postimg.org/6ibd9fez9/matrixx_rotation.png

Then we just add the two vectors, which is very simple in matrix form:

Spoiler

http://s17.postimg.org/yufksehlb/matrix_sum_of_two_rotations.png

This one is extremely easy to calculate. BUT (!!!) the rotation matrix is a monster on its own. For uniform circular motion, the rotation matrix becomes littered with sines and cosines. For elliptical motion, expect the rotation matrix to be very complicated.

This solution is much easier to solve (elementary matrix operations only) but a bitch to set up (rotation matrix for elliptical motion).[/details]

I’ve only ever did this kind of problem once, for an exam. It only involved uniform circular motion. I had to use the vector algebra method (no matrices) and it was hell. I can imagine that elliptical orbits are even more fucked up.

EDIT:
You have to go through the same procedures if you want to use Newton’s second law. But, since you get acceleration, you’ll have to integrate twice to get position. By this time, you’re dealing with very complicated expressions. Integrating would be VERY hard, likely even impossible.

so you have to apply operators on the vector equation and you come into complex domains. You can’t apply any tranformations on that can you. That’s ridicilous math, and now I see why one of my professor said vector calculus was probably some of the hardest things he has ever done.

For the matrix operations, do you have to check if the domain is a real space or follows all the basic rules of matrix math, when you apply the operators? Or can you apply the operators at will. F

No, the complex form is just a convenient way of denoting polar coordinates by defining the real axis as the x axis (and thus x-hat = 1) and the imaginary axis as the y axis (and thus y-hat = i).
By Euler’s formula rexp(θi) = r * [cos(θ) + i * sin(θ)], which is more recognizable as a vector with length r and angle θ in the complex plane.
Differentiating the exponential form is generally easier, or is my recollection from when I used to know how to do such things.

By the way, I missed the original posts but it sounds like you’re discussing the three-body problem.