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Archive for the ‘innovation’ category: Page 129

Mar 18, 2020

COVID-19: the immune system can fight back

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

Hope on the horizon:

1. Researcher make a breakthrough: Professor Katherine Kedzierska leads research at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity that discovers how the human body overcomes coronavirus.

Melbourne researchers have mapped immune responses from one of Australia’s first novel coronavirus (COVID-19) patients, showing the body’s ability to fight the virus and recover from the infection.

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Mar 17, 2020

Coronavirus Vaccine Could Be Available in 90 Days

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

While the CDC has a vaccination in clinical trials Israel claims they could have a COVID-19 vaccination available within 90 days:


Israeli Science and Technology Minister Ofir Akunis confirmed Thursday that scientists are close to developing the first vaccine against the COVID-19 novel coronavirus.

The vaccine could be ready within a few weeks and available in 90 days if all continues going according to plan, Akunis noted.

Continue reading “Coronavirus Vaccine Could Be Available in 90 Days” »

Mar 16, 2020

Special Report: Coronavirus Task Force Holds News Conference | NBC News (Live Stream)

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

The US is going to lockdown for 15 days to start.


Members of the Trump administration’s coronavirus task force, led by Vice President Mike Pence, hold a press briefing at the White House.
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Continue reading “Special Report: Coronavirus Task Force Holds News Conference | NBC News (Live Stream)” »

Mar 15, 2020

Hydrogen: The Secret To Commercializing Nuclear Fusion

Posted by in categories: innovation, nuclear energy

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There’s a new breakthrough that might just be the secret ingredient to commercialize “the holy grail of energy,” nuclear fusion.

Mar 10, 2020

Breakthrough made towards building the world’s most powerful particle accelerator

Posted by in categories: innovation, particle physics

An international team of researchers, affiliated with UNIST has for the first time succeeded in demonstrating the ionization cooling of muons. Regarded as a major step in being able to create the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, this new muon accelerator is expected to provide a better understanding of the fundamental constituents of matter.

This breakthrough has been carried out by the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) collaboration, which includes many UK scientists, as well as Professor Moses Chung and his research team in the School of Natural Sciences at UNIST. Their findings have been published in the online version of Nature on February 5, 2020.

“We have succeeded in realizing muon ionization cooling, one of our greatest challenges associated with developing muon accelerators,” says Professor Chung. “Achievement of this is considered especially important, as it could change the paradigm of developing the Lepton Collider that could replace the Neutrino Factory or the Large Hadron Collider (LHC).”

Mar 10, 2020

Put on socks without bending down

Posted by in category: innovation

This invention helps people put on their socks without bending down.

Mar 9, 2020

Immune cell which kills most cancers discovered by accident by British scientists in major breakthrough

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, innovation

3D illustration of a cancer cell in the process of mitosis. 3D illustration of a cancer cell in the process of mitosis. A new type of immune cell which kills most cancers has been discovered by accident by British scientists, in a finding which could herald a major breakthrough in treatment.

Researchers at Cardiff University were analysing blood from a bank in Wales, looking for immune cells that could fight bacteria, when they found an entirely new type of T-cell.

That new immune cell carries a never-before-seen receptor which acts like a grappling hook, latching on to most human cancers, while ignoring healthy cells.

Mar 9, 2020

Crystal creates a supercontinuum breakthrough

Posted by in categories: innovation, materials

Researchers have generated a wide range of colors from a single laser after discovering a new process for achieving so-called “supercontinuum generation.”

Supercontinuum generation is when intense of one color travels within a material, like glass, and broadens into a spectrum of colors.

The effect lets scientists produce light at colors tailored to particular applications in sectors like bioimaging, optical communications and fundamental studies of materials.

Mar 8, 2020

Researchers create the Jimi Hendrix of lasers

Posted by in categories: innovation, materials

Photonics experts at Heriot-Watt university are hailing a breakthrough in laser research.

They have come up with a new and relatively inexpensive way of creating a laser supercontinuum.

They hope it could eventually have applications in bio-imaging and optical communications.

Continue reading “Researchers create the Jimi Hendrix of lasers” »

Mar 7, 2020

How do human beings co-live with AI in the future?

Posted by in categories: innovation, robotics/AI

How do human beings co-live with #AI in the #future? https://bit.ly/39BkOXe “Artificial intelligence (AI) has triggered many concerns and discussions in recent years, and through these discussions people are prompted to introspect on what it really means to be a human being …” #technology #innovation


Artificial intelligence (AI) has triggered many concerns and discussions in recent years, and through these discussions people are prompted to introspect on what it really means to be a human being. It provides us with plenty of food for thought regarding our science, society, family, work, etc., and all of these raise an important inquiry: how is life going to be with artificial intelligence being around us?