| |||||
| |||||
Hello Nature readers, | |||||
![]() | |||||
(Shuntaro Yamada, University of Bergen) | |||||
The month's best science imagesUnder the right conditions, stem cells from the innermost layer of the tooth — known as dental pulp — can be coaxed into forming neuronal cells (pictured here) with specific shapes and features, says stem-cell biologist and dentist Shuntaro Yamada. Dental-pulp cells are derived from the neural crest, the part of an embryo that goes on to form the nervous system as well as bones in the face and skull. Researchers hope that dental-pulp stem cells could one day find applications in regenerative medicine. | |||||
A contest between telescopesWith the United States National Science Foundation recommending a cap on available funding for telescope projects, it seems that only one of two proposed telescopes could be built. The Giant Magellan Telescope on a mountaintop in Chile and the Thirty Meter Telescope on the Hawaiian mountain Maunakea have long been mooted, but struggled to secure the necessary backing. Meanwhile, the European Southern Observatory is proceeding with the Extremely Large Telescope in Chile. To some US researchers, the idea of having only one large telescope represents a major blow to US leadership in astronomy. Nature | 5 min read | |||||
'Biggest-ever animal' might not beThe blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus), which tops out at around 150 tonnes, might have reclaimed its crown as the undisputed heaviest animal of all time. Last August, we told you that fossil evidence suggested that Perucetus colossus, which lived around 30 million years ago, was heavier — around 180 tonnes. Not so fast, says a new study: Perucetus was considerably shorter than a blue whale and being so dense meant "it would have been a job for the whale to stay at the surface, or even to leave the sea bottom," says paleobiologist Ryosuke Motani. Using a different estimate of its body shape, Motani and colleague Nicholas Pyenson estimate Perucetus weighed in at more like 60 to 70 tonnes. The New York Times | 4 min readReference: PeerJ paper | |||||
A molecular machine with gearsResearchers have discovered the first example of communication between individual parts of a molecular machine. "The motor [behaves] as two motorised gears — the two rotors — connected via a third gear, the motor core unit," explains chemist and study co-author Carlijn van Beek. Similar coupled motion is seen in biological machines such as ATP synthase, the enzyme that creates the energy storage molecule ATP. "Although the ATP synthase is clearly capable of much more sophisticated functions than our synthetic motor … the development and control of molecular-level motions will open many possibilities," says van Beek. Chemistry World | 4 min readReference: Journal of the American Chemical Society paper | |||||
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
In pursuit of the world's largest flowerIn his new book Pathless Forest, botanist Chris Thorogood delves into his obsession with Rafflesia — the huge, parasitic, stemless, rootless, leafless, stinking 'corpse flower'. The endangered plant comes to personify nature's untamed essence — it is almost impossible to propagate or even successfully store in seed banks — and sheds light on the colonial legacies intertwined with botanical exploration. The Guardian | 4 min read | |||||
![]() | |||||
ACCESS NATURE AND 54 OTHER NATURE JOURNALS Nature+ is our most affordable 30-day subscription, giving you online access to a wide range of specialist Nature Portfolio journals, including Nature. Nature+ is for personal use and is suitable for students. | |||||
Futures: Eyes on historyAuthor Yelena Crane crafts a heart-rending tale about the exploitation of historical trauma in the latest short story for Nature's Futures series. Nature | 6 min read | |||||
Five best science books this weekAndrew Robinson's pick of the top five science books to read this week includes a stimulating analysis of moral dilemmas in artificial intelligence and a collection of essays on topics such as climate justice, written by Native American leaders. Nature | 4 min read | |||||
Podcast: How the cosmic fog liftedDwarf galaxies were responsible for ending the early Universe's dark ages, dispelling the dense 'fog' of neutral hydrogen that blocked starlight until around 13 billion years ago. It had been unclear where the ionizing radiation for this reionization process came from. Researchers who used the James Webb Space Telescope to peer deep into the Universe's past found a huge number of small, faint galaxies that were extremely efficient ionizers. "It's the little tiny galaxies that, by their numbers, actually outshine the big galaxies," astrophysicist and study co-author Hakim Atek tells the Nature Podcast. Nature Podcast | 26 min listenSubscribe to the Nature Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts or Spotify, or use the RSS feed. | |||||
Quote of the day"There seems to be something hardwired into the female brain that biases it more toward a state of wakefulness."Hormonal differences seem to explain why women wake more often during anaesthesia and can be aroused more quickly from sleep, says anaesthesiologist Max Kelz. (Nautilus | 4 min read) | |||||
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
Want more? Update your preferences to sign up to our other free Nature Briefing newsletters:
| |||||
| |||||
You received this newsletter because you subscribed with the email address: manojdole1.Lens@blogger.com Please add briefing@nature.com to your address book. Enjoying this newsletter? You can use this form to recommend it to a friend or colleague — thank you! Had enough? To unsubscribe from this Briefing, but keep receiving your other Nature Briefing newsletters, please update your subscription preferences. To stop all Nature Briefing emails forever, click here to remove your personal data from our system. Fancy a bit of a read? View our privacy policy. Forwarded by a friend? Get the Briefing straight to your inbox: subscribe for free. Want to master time management, protect your mental health and brush up on your skills? Sign up for our free short e-mail series for working scientists, Back to the lab. Get more from Nature: Register for free on nature.com to sign up for other newsletters specific to your field and email alerts from Nature Research journals. Would you like to read the Briefing in other languages? 关注Nature Portfolio官方微信订阅号,每周二为您推送Nature Briefing精选中文内容——自然每周简报。 Nature | The Springer Nature Campus, 4 Crinan Street, London, N1 9XW, United Kingdom Nature Research, part of Springer Nature. |
What matters in science | View this email in your browser Monday 4 March 2024 Hello Nature readers, Today we explore ideas for weighing neutrinos, prepare for the launch of a methane-detecting satellite and learn what it's like to be an expert witness. The KATRIN detector uses the radioactive decay of tritium to measure the neutrino's mass. (KIT/KATRIN Collaboration) Race to weigh neutrinos heats up Physicists gathered this week to compare notes on how t...
Comments
Post a Comment