A New Super-Thin Coating Could Cool Buildings Without AC

When it’s hot out, buildings have a hard time staying cool: bombarded with ambient heat and generating yet more inside, their air conditioning systems have to work hard to keep temperatures down. Now, a new super-thin coating developed at Stanford could be applied to buildings to help them cool themselves more effectively. Read more…

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A New Super-Thin Coating Could Cool Buildings Without AC

Rosetta’s Comet Is Singing and You Can Listen To It Here

Listen to it! That’s Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko singing. This cosmic song was just discovered by the European Space Agency, which released the soundtrack for our enjoyment. It’s totally new and unexpected, say the scientists who will remotely land a probe on the rocky surface of the comet tomorrow. Read more…

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Rosetta’s Comet Is Singing and You Can Listen To It Here

A New Pure Lithium Battery Could Double Your Phone’s Life

Virtually all of your gadgets tote lithium ion batteries—but while they’re the best you can hope for at the moment, new engineering means that pure lithium batteries are now a possibility , and they could double the life of your phone. Read more…

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A New Pure Lithium Battery Could Double Your Phone’s Life

Now YouTube Is Shaming ISPs For Slow Streaming Video

Sometime in the past few days, YouTube started showing a new error bar on slow-loading videos. “Experiencing interruptions? Find out why, ” it implores. Clicking through takes you to Google’s Video Quality Report page , comparing streaming quality of your local ISPs. If your provider’s slow, Google wants you to know. Read more…

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Now YouTube Is Shaming ISPs For Slow Streaming Video

Big Bang Discovery Researchers Backtrack on Original Claims

Well, this is embarrassing. Remember how a Harvard team found the first direct evidence of cosmic inflation right after the Big Bang ? Well, now it’s published its findings—and it’s backtracking on its original claims. Read more…

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Big Bang Discovery Researchers Backtrack on Original Claims

First Movie of an Entire Brain’s Neuronal Activity

KentuckyFC (1144503) writes “One of the goals of neuroscience is to understand how brains process information and generate appropriate behaviour. A technique that is revolutionising this work is optogenetics–the ability to insert genes into neurons that fluoresce when the neuron is active. That works well on the level of single neurons but the density of neurons in a brain is so high that it has been impossible to tell them apart when they fluoresce. Now researchers have solved this problem and proved it by filming the activity in the entire brain of a nematode worm for the first time and making the video available. Their solution comes in two parts. The first is to ensure that the inserted genes only fluoresce in the nuclei of the neurons. This makes it much easier to tell individual neurons in the brain apart. The second is a new techniques that scans the entire volume of the brain at a rate of 80 frames per second, fast enough to register all the neuronal activity within it. The researchers say their new technique should allow bigger brains to be filmed in the near future opening up the potential to study how various creatures process information and trigger an appropriate response for the first time.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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First Movie of an Entire Brain’s Neuronal Activity