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Science (General/Chat)

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  • Scientists Say Guava Juice Could Make Iron Supplements Work Better

    05/27/2026 3:57:17 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 7 replies
    Science Daily ^ | May 27, 2026
    A cheap, vitamin-packed fruit juice could become a surprising new weapon against anemia.Researchers found that drinking guava juice may significantly improve anemia by helping the body absorb iron more efficiently. In a review of 17 studies, women and teenage girls who consumed guava juice — especially with iron supplements — experienced noticeable increases in hemoglobin levels. Since guava contains far more vitamin C than oranges, scientists believe it could become a simple, affordable nutrition tool in regions where anemia is widespread. Guava Juice May Help Fight Anemia Guava juice may do far more than refresh on a hot day —...
  • Tribeca Festival Sets First Premiere of Fully AI-Generated Film, ‘Dreams of Violets’

    05/27/2026 1:53:42 PM PDT · by sphinx · 21 replies
    Variety ^ | May 27, 2026 | Corbin Bolies
    The 2026 Tribeca Festival has set the world premiere of “Dreams of Violets,” a fully AI-generated film produced by studio Fountain 0 aimed at showcasing Iranian civilian resistance.The film’s premiere at Tribeca marks the first full-length, live-action film generated by AI to be accepted by a marquee film festival, according to Fountain 0.The project took three months — built entirely using tools such as Kling AI for video generation, Anthropic’s Claude AI for language-related editing, Google’s Gemini and Nanobanana for research and imagery and Fountain 0’s own technology for blocking and frame accuracy, according to the company — all from...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - PK 164 +31.1: The Headphone Nebula

    05/27/2026 11:27:56 AM PDT · by MtnClimber · 6 replies
    NASA ^ | 27 May, 2026 | Image Credit & Copyright: Bernard Miller Text: Keighley Rockcliffe (NASA GSFC, UMBC CSST, CRESST II)
    Explanation: What is a pair of headphones doing in the sky? Today’s image features the Headphone Nebula, also known as PK 164 +31.1 or Jones-Emberson 1. This planetary nebula, the remnant of a dying Sun-like star, faintly occupies an angular region of the Lynx constellation about 1/5th the diameter of the full moon. The red and blue-ish green colors trace hydrogen and oxygen atoms, respectively, that have been excited and ionized by the nebula's central white dwarf. The headphone shape, where two lobes of hydrogen puncture the inner region of oxygen, adds this object to a long list of oddly...
  • No joke: data centers are warming the planet (still only 4.67 years left)

    05/27/2026 9:25:06 AM PDT · by Libloather · 23 replies
    Network World ^ | 4/01/26 | Paul Barker
    Findings by academic researchers suggest that hyperscalers' AI data centers contribute to local warming, but not everyone agrees. Findings of a new study conducted by a group of academics from around the globe have revealed that land surface temperature (LST) increases by 2°C (3.6°F) on average after the start of operations of an AI data center, an effect detectable up to an estimated 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) away. The study, The data heat island effect: quantifying the impact of AI data centers in a warming world, was conducted by a dozen experts from leading universities in the UK, Singapore, France,...
  • 10 Michelangelo Hidden Gems in Italy Most Tourists Never Find [10:17]

    05/26/2026 10:34:19 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 20 replies
    YouTube ^ | May 9, 2026 | Roam Roster
    Michelangelo left hidden gems across Florence, Rome, and Milan that most tourists never find. This Italy travel guide reveals 10 masterpieces you can still visit today, from a rejected drunk god in the Bargello to the last sculpture his hands ever touched. Most people spend four hours in Florence and see exactly one Michelangelo work. This video finds ten more, scattered across churches with no lines, chapels most visitors walk past, and museums that rarely appear on any itinerary. 10 Michelangelo Hidden Gems in Italy Most Tourists Never Find | 10:17 Roam Roster | 2.06K subscribers | 61,695 views |...
  • A crisis of conscience spurred this Christian IVF doctor’s career pivot

    05/26/2026 7:42:21 PM PDT · by CondoleezzaProtege · 11 replies
    AP News ^ | May 11, 2026 | Tiffany Stanley
    Dr. John Gordon, a reproductive endocrinologist, has been a man of faith for years. When he began to have doubts, they were not about his God, but his life’s work... As co-director of a fertility clinic in suburban Washington, D.C., Gordon grew troubled over helping create surplus embryos, which would often languish in storage or be discarded. With the expansion of genetic testing, couples could choose the sex of their baby. They could screen out painful or fatal diseases, but also milder impairments like hearing loss. “It’s too morally problematic,” Gordon thought. “I don’t know where you draw the line.”...
  • NYC ‘super speeders’ will now be forced to install speed-limiting devices in their cars

    05/26/2026 6:37:45 PM PDT · by Libloather · 45 replies
    NY Post ^ | 5/26/26 | Carl Campanile, Haley Brown
    The city’s s worst “super speeders” will be forced to install speed-limiting devices on their cars, under a new state law passed Tuesday. The measure, approved as part of the state’s budget, will require drivers with 16 or more speed camera violations in a year to install a speed-limiting device that uses GPS technology to keep drivers from going faster than posted speed limits. The new law is set to take effect about one year from the date Gov. Kathy Hochul signs the budget — and will apply only to violations that occur after that. “New York is putting these...
  • William Shatner and Neil deGrasse Tyson Dive Into Quantum Physics, Space Exploration and the Actor’s New Heavy Metal Album

    05/26/2026 6:25:32 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 34 replies
    The Hollywood Reporter ^ | Kimberly Nordyke
    The 'Star Trek' icon also performed a song called "Rage" during the wildly entertaining conversation, held Wednesday at the Saban Theatre in Los Angeles.William Shatner and Neil deGrasse Tyson regaled an enthusiastic crowd with stories of everything from our understanding quantum physics to Shatner‘s space flight to the meaning of the universe on Wednesday night during a conversation dubbed “The Universe Is Absurd!” at the Saban Theatre in Beverly Hills. The event was actually the second of a two-night event wherein the close friends ribbed each other and shared personal anecdotes of their adventures together, including their 2024 trip to...
  • 70-foot wastewater geyser reflects New Mexico’s latest oil field challenge

    05/26/2026 2:22:19 PM PDT · by CedarDave · 23 replies
    The Albuquerque Journal ^ | May 26,2026 | Jerry Redfern
    Driving the highway between Loving and Carlsbad on May 19, Jackie Onsurez noticed something unusual rising above an oilfield site operated by NGL Energy Partners. As he got closer, he realized the 70-foot plume was not smoke but a geyser of toxic oil field wastewater — known as produced water — erupting from a pipe. Onsurez, an engineer and member of New Mexico’s State Emergency Response Commission, immediately began calling NGL, 911, the New Mexico Environment Department and local officials. A roughneck arrived moments later and tried unsuccessfully to stop the spray. “The only people with protective gear were the...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - NGC 3660 and Burçin's Galaxy

    05/26/2026 12:15:28 PM PDT · by MtnClimber · 12 replies
    NASA ^ | 26 May, 2026 | Image Credit & Copyright: Adam Block, El Sauce Obs.
    Explanation: The upper galaxy might be more photogenic, but the lower galaxy is more unusual. The galaxy up top is NGC 3660, a spiral galaxy similar to our own Milky Way galaxy in that it has several bright blue spiral arms and a central bar of stars, dust, and gas. Captured by chance in the featured deep and colorful image, surprisingly, is SN 2026cff, a supernova found just to the right of the central bar. Farther in the distance is the bottom galaxy, known informally as Burçin’s galaxy, but formally cataloged as LEDA 1000714. The center of this galaxy appears...
  • Records shattered as summer heat hits Southwest in March; ‘This is what climate change looks like’ (still only 4.67 years left)

    05/26/2026 10:35:55 AM PDT · by Libloather · 91 replies
    AP News ^ | 5/20/26 | Seth Borenstein
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The dangerous heat wave shattering March records all over the U.S. Southwest is more than just another extreme weather blip. It’s the latest next-level weather wildness that is occurring ever more frequently as Earth’s warming builds. Experts said unprecedented and deadly weather extremes that sometimes strike at abnormal times and in unusual places are putting more people in danger. For example, the Southwest is used to coping with deadly heat, but not months ahead of schedule, including a 112 degrees Fahrenheit (44.4 degrees Celsius) reading in two Arizona communities on Friday that smashed the highest March temperature...
  • Google Deepmind's AlphaProof Nexus solves decades-old math problems for a few hundred dollars

    05/26/2026 8:29:32 AM PDT · by Twotone · 13 replies
    The Decoder ^ | May 25, 2026 | Matthias Bastian
    Google Deepmind's new framework AlphaProof Nexus has autonomously solved nine out of 353 open Erdős problems it attempted, including two questions that had gone unanswered for 56 years. The system also proved 44 out of 492 open conjectures from the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS), settled a 15-year-old question about Hilbert functions in algebraic geometry, and improved a known bound in convex optimization. Inference costs ran just a few hundred dollars per problem, according to the research paper. Unlike (potentially) pure natural-language approaches such as OpenAI's recent solution, the underlying language model in AlphaProof Nexus—in this case Gemini 3.1...
  • NY Dems running for House want fed funding for ‘Drag Story Hour’ as city, state spends $700K

    05/26/2026 4:19:43 AM PDT · by Libloather · 19 replies
    NY Post ^ | 5/26/26 | Carl Campanile
    Two New York Democrats running in a hotly contested congressional primary pledged federal funding for “Drag Story Hour” — as records show city and state taxpayers have paid nearly $700,000 to boost the program. Incumbent Rep. Dan Goldman and his opponent, former city Comptroller Brad Lander, both told an LGBTQ Democratic club that they support dishing out federal money to subsidize the program, which invited drag queens into schools to read to young children. “Unfortunately, the Majority does not allow funding from Members of Congress to support LGBTQIA+ programming,” Goldman wrote in on a questionnaire from the Jim Owles LGBT...
  • Resistance grows against New York’s 18 planned solar farms that locals say ruin land, kill animals and won’t create much energy (only 4.67 years left)

    05/25/2026 4:28:25 PM PDT · by Libloather · 17 replies
    NY Post ^ | 5/25/26 | Chadwick Moore
    New York is strong-arming 18 industrial-scale solar power plants into rural communities across the state despite strong opposition from locals. Schuylerville farmer Alexandra Fasulo had just settled into the idyllic acreage she purchased in 2023 when Gov. Kathy Hochul’s bulldozers came roaring in, poised to thrash 1,800 acres of protected grassland to build a 100-megawatt-capacity solar energy complex in nearby Fort Edward, NY. Worried that chemical runoff and contamination may affect her farm, Fasulo attended a town meeting last fall to voice concerns to developers and state authorities. “We were like serfs coming before a king. It was so much...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - Thackeray's Globules

    05/25/2026 11:42:26 AM PDT · by MtnClimber · 8 replies
    NASA ^ | 25 May, 2026 | Image Credit & Copyright: John Hayes
    Explanation: What are these strange space globs? Situated in rich star fields and glowing hydrogen gas, these opaque clouds of interstellar dust and gas are so large they might be able to form stars. Their home is known as IC 2944, a bright stellar nursery located about 7,600 light years away toward the constellation of the Centaur (Centaurus). The largest of these dark globules, first spotted by A. D. Thackeray in 1950 using a telescope in South Africa, is likely two separate but overlapping clouds, each more than one light-year wide. Along with other data, the featured Hubble palette image...
  • Film buff finds lost 1968 vampire TV movie that was rumored to be so scary it was ordered destroyed

    05/25/2026 1:45:43 AM PDT · by Libloather · 46 replies
    NY Post ^ | 5/24/26 | Brandon Cruz
    A film buff found a lost 1968 British TV movie about vampires that sparked a legend it was so terrifying it was marked for destruction, a preservation group announced. “No Such Thing as a Vampire” — one of six episodes from the short-lived 1960s BBC anthology series “Late Night Horror” — has been missing for more than half a century after it scarred viewers and caused an uproar that prompted the network to not only kill the show. But what is now believed to be the last surviving copy of the gory movie was recently discovered by English film-buff and...
  • Study Suggests Korea's Ancient Dogs Differed from Other East Asian Canines

    05/24/2026 2:50:36 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 27 replies
    Archaeology Magazine ^ | May 8, 2026 | editors / unattributed
    A genetic study of the remains of four 2,000-year-old dogs recovered from two archaeological sites on the Korean Peninsula suggests that the canines belonged to a lineage separate from other dog populations in East Asia, according to the Korea JoongAng Daily. It had been previously thought that dog populations in East Asian shared a single lineage. Hyeongcheol Kim of the Gaya National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage, Suyeon Kim and A-reum Yu of the National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage, and their colleagues determined that ancient Korean dogs resembled the Australian dingo and the New Guinea singing dog. Korean dogs...
  • UK Scientists Rushing to Create Ebola Vaccine Using COVID Jab Technology

    05/24/2026 11:24:54 AM PDT · by Red Badger · 45 replies
    The Gateway Pundit ^ | May 24, 2026 | Cassandra MacDonald
    The effort comes as a new outbreak of the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola continues to spread in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The Oxford Vaccine Group (OVG) announced it is urgently producing its candidate vaccine, ChAdOx1 BDBV, which could enter human clinical trials in as little as two to three months if animal testing succeeds. The Bundibugyo Ebolavirus is one of the less common but still highly lethal strains of Ebola. Unlike the more frequently seen Zaire strain, there are currently no licensed vaccines or specific treatments approved for Bundibugyo virus disease. The WHO and local authorities have described the...
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day - A Martian Eclipse: Phobos Crosses the Sun

    05/24/2026 10:45:57 AM PDT · by MtnClimber · 9 replies
    NASA ^ | 24 May, 2026 | Video Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech, ASU MSSS, SSI
    Explanation: What's that passing in front of the Sun? It looks like a moon, but it can't be Earth's Moon, because it isn't round. It's the Martian moon Phobos. The featured video was taken from the surface of Mars in 2022 by the Perseverance rover. Phobos, at 11.5 kilometers across, is 150 times smaller than Luna (our moon) in diameter, but also 50 times closer to its parent planet. In fact, Phobos is so close to Mars that it is expected to break up and crash into Mars within the next 50 million years. In the near term, the low...
  • Scientists thought Jupiter's moon Europa was ejecting water. Now they're not so sure

    05/24/2026 7:25:43 AM PDT · by BenLurkin · 13 replies
    space.com ^ | Robert Lea
    "The evidence for water vapor plumes on Europa isn’t as strong as we first understood it,"