These Are Rainbow Eucalyptus Trees (Eucalyptus Deglupta) And Hail From The Philippine Islands.

These Are Rainbow Eucalyptus Trees (Eucalyptus Deglupta) And Hail From The Philippine Islands.

These are rainbow eucalyptus trees (Eucalyptus deglupta) and hail from the Philippine Islands.

The trees get their name from the striking colours observed on their trunks and limbs. Although it may look like someone took a paintbrush to them, these colours are entirely natural. Unlike most trees, the rainbow eucalyptus does not have a thick, cork-like layer of bark on its trunk. The bark is smooth and as it grows it ‘exfoliates’ layers of spent tissue. This exfoliation technique occurs at different stages and in different zones of the tree.

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8 years ago
Virus Carrying DNA Of Black Widow Spider Toxin Discovered
Virus Carrying DNA Of Black Widow Spider Toxin Discovered

Virus carrying DNA of black widow spider toxin discovered

A tiny virus that may sting like a black widow spider.

That is one of the surprise discoveries made by a pair of Vanderbilt biologists when they sequenced the genome of a virus that attacks Wolbachia, a bacterial parasite that has successfully infected not only black widow spiders but more than half of all arthropod species, which include insects, spiders and crustaceans.

“Discovering DNA related to the black widow spider toxin gene came as a total surprise because it is the first time that a phage – a virus that infects bacteria – has been found carrying animal-like DNA,” said Associate Professor of Biological Sciences Seth Bordenstein. He and Senior Research Specialist Sarah Bordenstein reported the results of their study in a paper titled “Eukaryotic association module in phage WO genomes from Wolbachia” published Oct. 11 in the journal Nature Communications.

Sarah R. Bordenstein, Seth R. Bordenstein. Eukaryotic association module in phage WO genomes from Wolbachia. Nature Communications, 2016; 7: 13155 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms13155

DNA related to black widow spider toxin has been found in a bacterial virus. (iStock)

The oval shape in this electron microphotograph is a Wolbachia bacterium that has infected a Nasonia wasp. The small dots in the bacterium are WO phage particles. The inset shows them at a higher magnification. The white arrows in the inset point to the phage tails. The scale bar in the image is 200 nm and the bar in he inset is 100 nm. (Bordenstein Lab / Vanderbilt)


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7 years ago
Today Is The Autumn Equinox In The Northern Hemisphere! What’s Behind The Changing Colours Of Autumn

Today is the Autumn Equinox in the northern hemisphere! What’s behind the changing colours of autumn leaves? http://wp.me/p4aPLT-sn


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8 years ago

Watching a snowflake grow seems almost magical–the six-sided shape, the symmetry, the way every arm of it grows simultaneously. But it’s science that guides the snowflake, not magic. Snowflakes are ice crystals; their six-sided shape comes from how water molecules fit together. The elaborate structures and branches in a snowflake are the result of the exact temperature and humidity conditions when that part of the snowflake formed. The crystals look symmetric and seem to grow identical arms simultaneously because the temperature and humidity conditions are the same around the tiny forming crystals. And the old adage that no two snowflakes are alike doesn’t hold either. If you can control the conditions well enough, you can grow identical-twin snowflakes! (Video credit: K. Libbrecht)


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8 years ago

Getting Enraged By Specific Noises Has A Genuine Neurological Basis. Does the sound of whistling enrage you? How about the noise of someone eating? It now seems likely that those people who get infuriated by certain sounds might not just be being fussy, but actually have brains hardwired to produce an excessive emotional response to particular noises.


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8 years ago
Quote By #rosalindfranklin How Do You Make Science A Part Of Your Life? What Are You Doing To Fight For

Quote by #rosalindfranklin How do you make science a part of your life? What are you doing to fight for scientific literacy? More quotes and questions in my #ilovescience journal. #womeninscience #scientificliteracy


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9 years ago
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain
Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity Of The Human Brain

Giant Artwork Reflects The Gorgeous Complexity of The Human Brain

The new work at The Franklin Institute may be the most complex and detailed artistic depiction of the brain ever.

Your brain has approximately 86 billion neurons joined together through some 100 trillion connections, giving rise to a complex biological machine capable of pulling off amazing feats. Yet it’s difficult to truly grasp the sophistication of this interconnected web of cells.

Now, a new work of art based on actual scientific data provides a glimpse into this complexity.

The 8-by-12-foot gold panel, depicting a sagittal slice of the human brain, blends hand drawing and multiple human brain datasets from several universities. The work was created by Greg Dunn, a neuroscientist-turned-artist, and Brian Edwards, a physicist at the University of Pennsylvania, and goes on display at The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. 

“The human brain is insanely complicated,” Dunn said. “Rather than being told that your brain has 80 billion neurons, you can see with your own eyes what the activity of 500,000 of them looks like, and that has a much greater capacity to make an emotional impact than does a factoid in a book someplace.”

To reflect the neural activity within the brain, Dunn and Edwards have developed a technique called micro-etching: They paint the neurons by making microscopic ridges on a reflective sheet in such a way that they catch and reflect light from certain angles. When the light source moves in relation to the gold panel, the image appears to be animated, as if waves of activity are sweeping through it.

First, the visual cortex at the back of the brain lights up, then light propagates to the rest of the brain, gleaming and dimming in various regions — just as neurons would signal inside a real brain when you look at a piece of art.

That’s the idea behind the name of Dunn and Edwards’ piece: “Self Reflected.” It’s basically an animated painting of your brain perceiving itself in an animated painting.

To make the artwork resemble a real brain as closely as possible, the artists used actual MRI scans and human brain maps, but the datasets were not detailed enough. “There were a lot of holes to fill in,” Dunn said. Several students working with the duo explored scientific literature to figure out what types of neurons are in a given brain region, what they look like and what they are connected to. Then the artists drew each neuron.

Dunn and Edwards then used data from DTI scans — a special type of imaging that maps bundles of white matter connecting different regions of the brain. This completed the picture, and the results were scanned into a computer. Using photolithography, the artists etched the image onto a panel covered with gold leaf.

“A lot of times in science and engineering, we take a complex object and distill it down to its bare essential components, and study that component really well” Edwards said. But when it comes to the brain, understanding one neuron is very different from understanding how billions of neurons work together and give rise to consciousness.

“Of course, we can’t explain consciousness through an art piece, but we can give a sense of the fact that it is more complicated than just a few neurons,” he added.

The artists hope their work will inspire people, even professional neuroscientists, “to take a moment and remember that our brains are absolutely insanely beautiful and they are buzzing with activity every instant of our lives,” Dunn said. “Everybody takes it for granted, but we have, at the very core of our being, the most complex machine in the entire universe.”

Image 1: A computer image of “Self Reflected,” an etching of a human brain created by artists Greg Dunn and Brian Edwards.

Image 2: A close-up of the cerebellum in the finished work.

Image 3: A close-up of the motor cortex in the finished work.

Image 4: This is what “Self Reflected” looks like when it’s illuminated with all white light.

Image 5: Pons and brainstem close up.

Image 6: Putkinje neurons - color encodes reflective position in microetching.

Image 7: Primary visual cortex in the calcarine fissure.

Image 8: Basal ganglia and connected circuitry.

Image 9: Parietal cortex.

Image 10: Cerebellum.

Credit for all Images: Greg Dunn - “Self Reflected”

Source: The Huffington Post (by Bahar Gholipour)


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8 years ago
Archbishop Ussher’s Chronology Was Taken As Gospel In The Western World. Until We Turned To Another
Archbishop Ussher’s Chronology Was Taken As Gospel In The Western World. Until We Turned To Another
Archbishop Ussher’s Chronology Was Taken As Gospel In The Western World. Until We Turned To Another
Archbishop Ussher’s Chronology Was Taken As Gospel In The Western World. Until We Turned To Another

Archbishop Ussher’s chronology was taken as gospel in the Western world. Until we turned to another book to find the age of the earth, the one that was written in the rocks themselves.


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9 years ago
Neural Pathways By Alexey Kashpersky
Neural Pathways By Alexey Kashpersky
Neural Pathways By Alexey Kashpersky
Neural Pathways By Alexey Kashpersky
Neural Pathways By Alexey Kashpersky
Neural Pathways By Alexey Kashpersky

Neural Pathways by Alexey Kashpersky


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6 years ago
Breaking News:
Breaking News:
Breaking News:

Breaking News:

The Nobel Prize in Physics for 2018 has been awarded to Arthur Ashkin, Gerard Mourou and Donna Strickland “for groundbreaking inventions in the field of laser physics”.

Donna Strickland is the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physics in 55 years.

Nobel Laureate Arthur Ashkin has been awarded the #NobelPrize in Physics “for the optical tweezers and their application to biological systems.”

Nobel Laureates Gérard Mourou and Donna Strickland have been awarded the #NobelPrize in Physics “for their method of generating high-intensity, ultra-short optical pulses.”

Article here with more information about their work:

Arthur Ashkin, Gérard Mourou and Donna Strickland win Nobel physics prize


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8 years ago
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD
NASA Unveils Greatest Views Of The Aurorae Ever, From Space In HD

NASA unveils greatest views of the aurorae ever, from space in HD

“When the free electrons finally find the ions they bind to, they drop down in energy, creating an incredible display of colorful possibilities. Of all of them, it’s the oxygen (mostly, with the strong emission line at 558 nanometers) and the nitrogen (secondary, with the smaller line at a slightly higher wavelength) that create the familiar, spectacular green color we most commonly associate with aurorae, but blues and reds — often at higher altitudes — are sometimes possible, too, with contributions from all three of the major atmospheric elements and their combinations.”

The northern (aurora borealis) and southern (aurora australis) lights are caused by a combination of three phenomena on our world, that make our aurorae unique among all worlds in our solar system:

Outbursts from the Sun that can go in any direction,

Our magnetic field, that funnels charged particles into circles around the poles,

And our atmospheric composition, that causes the colors and the displays we see.

Put all of these together and add in a 4k camera aboard the ISS, and you’ve got an outstanding recipe for the greatest aurora video ever composed. Here’s the in-depth science behind it, too.


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contradictiontonature - sapere aude
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A pharmacist and a little science sideblog. "Knowledge belongs to humanity, and is the torch which illuminates the world." - Louis Pasteur

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