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Foie gras made without force-feeding thanks to molecular mimicry

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/25/2025 - 8:00am
Scientists have replicated the luxurious mouthfeel of foie gras using the liver and fat of ducks reared and slaughtered normally, avoiding the controversial techniques involved in traditional production
Categories: Science

Botany Pond ducks (with videos)

Why Evolution is True Feed - Tue, 03/25/2025 - 6:15am

Mordecai and Esther are still here, and looking fat, healthy and happy. I thought I’d show a few photos today in lieu of Readers’ Wildlife, and add a couple of videos. (I tried to get a photo of Esther quackling loudly, which she’s wont to do, but she didn’t perform yesterday, when I took all these photos and videos.)

First a photo of the ducks. Here’s Mordecai. Isn’t he handsome?

Here he is getting out of the pond after a bracing swim (It was chilly yesterday). Esther swims nearby (the camera was a bit wonky), about to follow him:

The lovely Queen Esther:

Here’s the pair on their favorite spot: the warm cement ledge on the east side of the Pond, where they rest and dry off in the afternoons. Esther has a quick drink, and they sun themselves and preen.

Mordecai looking around. I love his iridescent head.

The difference in appearance between males (drakes) and females (hens) is surely due to sexual selection. The females are well camouflaged in the grass, while males sacrifice some of that camouflage to attract females. We have no idea why females prefer yellow beaks and metallic green heads; the reason why females in different species prefer different traits is largely a mystery. (Of course there are some sex differences in traits, like antlers in elk and body size used for fighting in elephant seals, that are well understood; males win females–and offspring–by winning contests. Darwin called this the “law of battle.”)

Here they are both out of the water. Towards the end of this short video Mordecai engages in some stretching, which we call “duck yoga”. He also scratches his chin, though ducks don’t have chins.

Esther and Mordecai together on the edge. They’re both oiling their feathers. Mallards have an oil gland at the base of their tail, and they repeatedly dip their beaks in it and then spread the oil on their feathers to waterproof them. Hence the expression, “Like water off a duck’s back.” If you’ve ever seen a duck in the rain, you’ll see that the water just beads up and runs off their oily bodies.

Categories: Science

Ex-UK cyber chief says asking Apple to break encryption was 'naive'

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/25/2025 - 4:55am
Ciaran Martin, the former head of cyber security at GCHQ, says the UK government was "naive" to expect a request for Apple to weaken its encryption services to remain secret. He thinks governments must come to terms with the fact that uncrackable encryption is here to stay.
Categories: Science

Smartphones may be beneficial to children – if they avoid social media

New Scientist Feed - Tue, 03/25/2025 - 3:00am
In the ongoing debate over the benefits and harms of smartphone use in children, initial data from a US survey suggests the devices can actually improve well-being and social connections, but social media use may be more harmful
Categories: Science

Skeptoid #981: Vaccines: Success Story of the Century

Skeptoid Feed - Tue, 03/25/2025 - 2:00am

Vaccines are history's great medical success story, having saved more lives than anything else.

Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
Categories: Critical Thinking, Skeptic

A Review of “In Covid’s Wake”: According to Laptop Class Professors, the Heroes of the Pandemic Were Laptop Class Professors

Science-based Medicine Feed - Tue, 03/25/2025 - 12:09am

The authors of the Great Barrington Declaration prevented fair and honest discussion by constantly spreading fake information. The authors of a new book don't care at all.

The post A Review of “In Covid’s Wake”: According to Laptop Class Professors, the Heroes of the Pandemic Were Laptop Class Professors first appeared on Science-Based Medicine.
Categories: Science

How an Actively Feeding Supermassive Black Hole Could Be Good for Life

Universe Today Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 8:11pm

When it comes to safe places for life, supermassive black holes are probably the last place you'd consider safe for nearby planets, let alone life-bearing ones. There are good reasons for this: those monsters at the hearts of galaxies suck down everything that comes into contact with them. When they do that, they blast out killer radiation. Neither activity is necessarily good for life. Or is it? As it turns out, radiation from these active galactic nuclei (AGN) can nurture life under the right circumstances.

Categories: Science

A Seemingly Normal Spiral Galaxy Has Huge Jets Extending Millions of Light-Years

Universe Today Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 4:41pm

Scientists have detected a fascinating spiral galaxy located about one billion light-years away. At the heart of this cosmic goliath, powerful radio jets are blasting out of its centre, stretching six million light years into space. A team of researchers have suggested that a smaller dwarf galaxy plunged into its centre, passing close to its supermassive black hole triggering immense flares, intense radiation and driving the colossal radio jets. Surprisingly however, despite the tremendous amounts of energy, the galaxy has kept its spiral structure.

Categories: Science

Lunar Samples Identify Exactly When the Moon's Largest Crater Formed

Universe Today Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 3:40pm

China’s Chang’e-6 mission has been exploring the largest crater on the Moon. It’s known as Aitken Basin and is found at the South Pole of the Moon where craters are permanently shadowed. The crater is a whopping 2,500 km across and measures 10km deep and Chang’e-6 data has revealed that a giant asteroid smashed into the Moon about 4.25 billion years ago.

Categories: Science

A simple way to boost math progress

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 3:15pm
Scientists investigated whether email interventions informed by behavioral science could help teachers help students learn math.
Categories: Science

Affordable sensing system to restore sense of touch in minimally invasive surgery

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 3:15pm
Researchers have developed an innovative sensing system that restores the missing tactile feedback in minimally invasive surgery (MIS), enhancing precision, ease of use, and safety. The new 'off-the-jaw' system integrates force and angle sensors into the handle of laparoscopic tools, providing surgeons with real-time measurements of grasping forces and insights into tissue stiffness and thickness.
Categories: Science

Organic molecules of unprecedented size discovered on Mars

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 12:24pm
The longest organic molecules identified to date on Mars have recently been detected. These long carbon chains, containing up to 12 consecutive carbon atoms, could exhibit features similar to the fatty acids produced on Earth by biological activity. The lack of geological activity and the cold, arid climate on Mars have helped preserve this invaluable organic matter in a clay-rich sample for the past 3.7 billion years. It therefore dates from the period during which life first emerged on Earth.
Categories: Science

Mathematicians uncover the logic behind how people walk in crowds

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 12:24pm
Mathematicians studied the flow of human crowds and developed a way to predict when pedestrian paths will transition from orderly to entangled. Their findings may help inform the design of public spaces that promote safe and efficient thoroughfares.
Categories: Science

A Swarm of Spacecraft Could Intercept Interstellar Objects

Universe Today Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 12:09pm

We've learned that Interstellar Objects (ISOs) are not strangers to our Solar System. Many have visited, and many more will in the future. The Vera Rubin Observatory is expected to find hundreds each year. Scientists are keen to learn more about them, and a swarm of spacecraft on standby might be the way to do it.

Categories: Science

New tool enables remote hardware troubleshooting

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 11:20am
A team of researchers has developed a new tool designed to revolutionize hardware troubleshooting, with the help of 3D phone scans.
Categories: Science

3D nanotech blankets offer new path to clean drinking water

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 11:19am
Researchers have developed a new material that, by harnessing the power of sunlight, can clear water of dangerous pollutants.
Categories: Science

Floating wood could help us refreeze the Arctic seas

New Scientist Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 11:00am
Floating platforms of wood could draw up seawater and help it to freeze, seeding the formation of new sea ice
Categories: Science

Researchers Test a Completely Flat Telescope Lens

Universe Today Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 10:53am

Telescope optics can be made of mirrors or lenses, but in both cases, they're bulky and need to follow a strict mathematical curve to focus light. Researchers have shown that it's possible to make a completely flat lens that focuses light. Traditionally, this has been done with Fresnel lenses, but they distort colors. Their new technique carves tiny concentric rings into a substrate that matches the wavelengths of different colors, allowing a full-color, in-focus image.

Categories: Science

Even moderate CO2 emissions could lead to 7°C of warming by 2200

New Scientist Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 10:32am
There's a small chance of very high warming even with moderate future emissions, according to a computer model exploring what could happen in the next thousand years
Categories: Science

How a surprising twist on rewilding could help settle our carbon debt

New Scientist Feed - Mon, 03/24/2025 - 9:00am
We’ve pumped huge amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that needs to be paid back. Large animals like wolves, bison and whales may already be tackling the problem
Categories: Science

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