All posts tagged: Creates

Mississippi State physicist creates neutron star reaction in the lab

Mississippi State physicist creates neutron star reaction in the lab

For years, physicists have wondered whether one unstable form of copper might act like a traffic jam inside some of the most violent explosions in the universe. That question matters because those explosions, called Type-I X-ray bursts, are part of the cosmic machinery that helps build heavier elements. Hydrogen and helium dominated the early universe. Much of what came later, including the oxygen in the air and the iron deep inside Earth, had to be forged in stars and stellar blasts. Now, a team led by Mississippi State physicist Jaspreet Randhawa has directly measured a key nuclear reaction tied to that process. The result suggests the suspected slowdown is much weaker than scientists feared. Therefore, heavier elements have a clearer path to form during explosive bursts on neutron stars. “The universe began almost entirely with hydrogen and helium,” Randhawa said. “Every heavier element, from the oxygen we breathe to the iron in Earth’s core, was forged later in stars and stellar explosions. By identifying how stellar explosions build heavier elements, scientists gain a clearer picture …

Spring flowers bloom in England after mix of hot and cold weather creates ideal conditions | UK weather

Spring flowers bloom in England after mix of hot and cold weather creates ideal conditions | UK weather

Colourful tulips, hyacinths, wisteria and daffodils have made a remarkable display across England after a short period of hot weather followed by a cold snap created excellent conditions for spring blooms. There were record temperatures last week in many parts of the UK as the country recorded one of the hottest April days in the last 80 years. A high of 26.5C (79.7F) was recorded in Kew Gardens, south-west London, on Wednesday, the Met Office said. It was the hottest day recorded in the first half of April since 1946, according to the forecaster. London was hotter than many popular holiday destinations including Ibiza, Rome and Marrakech. Then, there was a sudden drop in temperatures by as much as 10C. This created the ideal conditions for spectacular spring blooms, gardeners have said. Tim Upson, the director of gardens and horticulture at the Royal Horticultural Society, said: “Throughout spring it is typical to experience episodes of warmer and cooler weather accelerating and decelerating plants’ development across the UK. Spring has arrived notably early in the south …

Man Creates Tiny Submarine for His Parakeet to Experience Life Underwater

Man Creates Tiny Submarine for His Parakeet to Experience Life Underwater

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech Parakeets, which comprise about 115 species of seed-eating parrots, are frequently bred and sold commercially as pets. They’re intelligent, social, and can live up to 12 years in captivity. They can even apparently take a plunge inside a custom-made submarine, as Steven Lawyer, owner of a six-year-old parakeet named Bebe, established during a fascinating experiment in the Bahamas. A video, which has swiftly gone viral, shows the bird chilling inside a DIY sub made of a paintball air cylinder, oxygen meter, and lead weights. “We like to snorkel and he likes doing whatever we are doing with us,” Lawyer told CBS affiliate WBNS. “So I thought ‘lets figure out a way to let him snorkel with us.’” His mini submarine, dubbed the “Bebosphere,” allowed the green parakeet to dive to around three feet below the surface, giving it an unprecedented glance at the colorful reefs — something his species has likely never seen firsthand before. Bebe appeared to …

New solar reactor creates clean hydrogen from plastic waste and car battery acid

New solar reactor creates clean hydrogen from plastic waste and car battery acid

Developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge, a new solar-powered reactor could revolutionise plastic waste recycling, in a process that uses old car battery acid to convert discarded materials into clean hydrogen Two waste streams could be used to create clean hydrogen and industrial chemicals, helping resolve the question of the millions of tons of plastic produced globally each year. Researchers at the University of Cambridge have developed a method of solar-powered acid photoreforming, utilising battery acid taken from old car batteries to break down plastic waste that has traditionally been harder to recycle, such as nylon textiles, polyurethane foams and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic bottles. As reported in Joule, the team first applied the car battery acid to the plastic waste, breaking down the long polymer chains. This created ethylene glycol, which is then converted by the photocatalyst into acetic acid and hydrogen when exposed to sunlight. The acid-stable photocatalyst was key “The discovery was almost accidental,” said Professor Erwin Reisner from Cambridge’s Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, who led the research. “We …

Apple Fan Creates Unofficial WWDC 2026 and 50th Anniversary Enamel Pins

Apple Fan Creates Unofficial WWDC 2026 and 50th Anniversary Enamel Pins

App developer Clément Sauvage has designed a set of enamel pins for Apple fans who want to commemorate WWDC 2026 and Apple’s 50th anniversary. Sauvage is offering the pins on Kickstarter, and plans to start shipments in May ahead of WWDC. The pins feature the Apple developer logo, the Apple Intelligence icon, Apple’s “spaceship” and rainbow at the Apple Park campus, the entrance to Apple’s Infinite Loop campus, the Swift logo, and more. A single pin is available for 10 euros, while a full set of eight WWDC-themed pins is priced at 45 euros. Sauvage has done enamel pin sets in 2021 and 2024, so this is his third offering. There are some add-on pins from prior years available as well. Apple often designs its own WWDC pins that are given to developers that attend the WWDC Special Event, but the pins are not available for general purchase. Popular Stories Apple Preparing ‘Most Significant Overhaul in the iPhone’s History’ Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has high expectations for Apple’s first foldable iPhone. In his Power On newsletter today, …

Germany Creates New Council to Oversee Returns of Looted Art

Germany Creates New Council to Oversee Returns of Looted Art

The German government is creating a new council to oversee the restitution of artifacts acquired in a colonial context, the Art Newspaper reported Tuesday. The new panel, known as the Coordination Council for Returns of Cultural Property and Human Remains from Colonial Contexts, will be made up of representatives from German government, state, and municipal authorities, according to a statement released yesterday. The council is “an important step in responsibly handling cultural property and human remains from colonial contexts,” explained German culture minister Wolfram Weimer.  Related Articles The news follows the creation of other European committees tasked with establishing frameworks for the return of looted objects. (America lacks a centralized law enforcing the return of international trafficked items, though many major American museums such as the Smithsonian have formed their own policies regarding stolen artifacts in recent years):  In 2017, French President Emmanuel Macron pledged to return works of art looted in Africa during the colonial era; a 2026 proposal passed unanimously by the French Senate in January aims to formalize the process of restitution of …

Parasitic sleeping sickness creates ‘invisibility cloak’ to hide in humans for years

Parasitic sleeping sickness creates ‘invisibility cloak’ to hide in humans for years

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. The notorious disease known as sleeping sickness can lurk inside a host for months or even years before serious symptoms arrive. When these tiny parasites do, it’s often a death sentence for its human host. After confounding epidemiologists for decades, researchers now know exactly how sleeping sickness can remain undetected for so long. Its secret weapon is a constantly adapting “invisibility cloak” crafted from special proteins. The evidence is laid out in a study published on March 30 in the journal Nature Microbiology. Trypanosomiasis, better known as sleeping sickness, starts with a tiny bloodsucking bug called the tsetse fly that causes a huge problem. Like the mosquito, the tsetse fly is a vector for multiple dangerous diseases. However, the tsetse fly is particularly notorious for its role in spreading sleeping sickness in humans via the parasite Typanosoma brucei gambiense (T. brucei). Roughly 70 million people across 36 countries are still at risk of contracting sleeping sickness, and a total …

Employee Creates Graveyard To Remember All Of Her Favorite Co-Workers Who Left The Job

Employee Creates Graveyard To Remember All Of Her Favorite Co-Workers Who Left The Job

A woman named Alexia shared the humorous and poignant remembrance she created in honor of her co-worker friends who no longer worked with her. She created a “graveyard” by printing out pictures of resigned co-workers and taping them to her desktop monitor. While her social media post was meant to be all in good fun, the truth is that co-workers impact our lives. These are people you spend a significant amount of your life with, and when they are no longer a part of your daily routine, that creates loss. Work friends make the day more manageable. They give you an outlet for frustration. They offer support and camaraderie and even a little spark of joy in often otherwise monotonous days. An employee created a ‘graveyard’ to remember her favorite co-workers who left the job. AnnaStills | Shutterstock Alexia captioned her Instagram post simply “Why do my favs keep leaving?!” The four images of smiling faces were followed by a gravestone reading R.I.P. She didn’t have their pictures on top of her desk, but rather …