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Webb Telescope Reveals Dark Surface of Exoplanet LHS 3844b

Sebastian Zieba: “Since LHS 3,844 b lacks such a silicate crust, one may conclude that Earth-like plate tectonics does not apply to this planet, or it is ineffective. This planet likely only contains little water.”


What do the surfaces of rocky exoplanets look like? This is what a recent study published in Nature Astronomy hopes to address as a team of scientists investigated how heat measurements could be used to ascertain the potential physical and chemical properties of a rocky nearby rocky exoplanet. This study has the potential to help scientists use new methods for studying rocky exoplanets, as they are still too far away to be directly observed.

For the study, the researchers used NASA’s powerful James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to observe the rocky exoplanet LHS 3,844 b, which is located approximately 49 light-years from Earth and whose mass and radius is estimated to be almost 2.5 and 1.3 times of Earth, respectively. LHS 3,844 b orbits inside the interior edge of its star’s habitable zone, making it analog to Mercury. To accomplish this, the researchers used JWST to obtain heat measurements of LHS 3,844 b to ascertain the exoplanet’s potential physical, geological, and chemical properties.

In the end, the researchers found that LHS 3,844 b is likely comprised of a dark, volcanic surface that’s been weathered by space radiation. The team notes that LHS 3,384 b either has a fresh surface or mimics the Moon or Mercury, the latter of which ceased volcanic activity billions of years ago. The team was also able to potentially rule out a distinct geological characteristic that Earth possesses.

Oldest Moon Craters Are Best Targets for Water Ice

“We found that the earlier a region became shadowed, the larger the area that was able to accumulate ice,” said Dr. Oded Aharonson. [ https://www.labroots.com/trending/space/30512/moon-craters-targets-water-ice-2](https://www.labroots.com/trending/space/30512/moon-craters-targets-water-ice-2)


What are the best places on the Moon to find water ice that can be used for future crewed missions to the Moon’s surface? This is what a recent study published in Nature Astronomy hopes to address as a team of scientists investigated potential regions of the Moon where future astronauts could have the highest chance of finding water ice. This study has the potential to help scientists, engineers, mission planners, and future astronauts narrow the scope for finding the best locations of water ice on the Moon to aid in future crewed missions, thus negating the need for water supplies from Earth.

For the study, the researchers analyze data obtained from the Lyman-Alpha Mapping Project (LAMP), which is an instrument on the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter designed to map the entire surface of the Moon in far ultraviolet light. They combined these findings with computer models designed to simulate how and when water was delivered to the Moon millions to billions of years ago.

In the end, the researchers found that Shackleton Crater, a portion of which is located directly at the lunar south pole, is not the most ideal location for water ice, which has long been thought. In contrast, the researchers propose that Haworth Crater is the ideal location for finding water ice. Additionally, the researchers found that some of these regions have been building water ice for as long as 1.5 billion years.

2024 World Computer Chess Championships: The 50th Anniversary

Hosted by the european conference on artificial intelligence.

Sponsored by Google DeepMind.

In August 1970, six chess-playing programs and their developers gathered in New York to compete in the 1st United States Computer Chess Championship. This important event in the history of AI research began a series of annual competitions that continues to this day, longer than any other experiment in computer science history.

OS Orchestration: Stepping Into a Frictionless Future of AI Sparks and Endless Abundance

There’s a very specific reason the tech giants are suddenly racing to get AI running locally on your phone, watch, and smart glasses.

The traditional Operating System (OS) is quietly being retired. Soon, the OS as you know it will be replaced entirely by an omnipresent AI hub.

But if the OS becomes an AI, what happens to that grid of static apps we rely on every day? And when the friction of swiping and searching disappears, how does the underlying economy of the Internet shift?

In my latest piece, I explore what happens next: the death of the app, the rise of dynamic AI “Sparks,” and a hidden token economy where your device doesn’t just cost you money—it generates it.

Want a glimpse at what your digital life looks like when you stop swiping and start orchestrating?


I have been on a breathtaking journey, for decades I have been watching how we connect with the world and each other. If you’ve been around tech long enough, you remember the humble hum of single twisted-pair copper wires, and the sheer, brick-like weight of early cell phones. Fast forward to today, and we are streaming the entirety of human knowledge over millimeter-wave antennas onto super-thin slabs of glass in our pockets.

The Entire Quantum Universe is Inside the Atom

Try InVideo AI for free here: https://invideo.io/i/ArvinAsh This will save you hundreds of dollars that you would otherwise spend on editing, animating and other production costs.

Talk to ME (ARVIN) on Patreon and More:
/ arvinash.

REFERENCES
How the 4 fundamental forces work • Why & How do the 4 fundamental forces of n…
History of atom • The Quantum Mechanical model of an atom. W…
Strong Force • Why Don’t Protons Fly Apart in the Nucleus… https://tinyurl.com/2bqv3b9y
Source of mass • How Can MASS and ENERGY be the Same Thing?… https://tinyurl.com/29crnzy2
Medium article https://tinyurl.com/2by2sdbq
Weak Force https://tinyurl.com/25gp9ty7

CHAPTERS
0:00 Why Universe is inside an Atom
1:29 What is an atom?
4:44 Louis de Broglie finds waves!
6:28 Electromagnetic force explained
7:24-Sponsor InVideo
8:35 Strong Force explained, color charges!
12:33 Weak Force explained
14:58 Why is Weak Force called a \.

A simple filter swap could advance marine eDNA biomonitoring

Researchers at Aarhus University have demonstrated that a simple adjustment to water filtration methods can dramatically improve the detection of marine animal DNA when using advanced, PCR-free sequencing. This methodological optimization could help clear a major bottleneck in aquatic biomonitoring and marine conservation efforts. The study is published in Metabarcoding and Metagenomics.

Over the past two decades, environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis has become a crucial tool for monitoring aquatic ecosystems. The most common method, metabarcoding, relies on PCR amplification of a smaller genetic region to identify specific taxa. However, PCR can lead to “significant taxonomic bias” because it often amplifies the DNA of different organisms unequally, making quantitative estimates difficult.

To avoid this, scientists have increasingly explored “shotgun sequencing”—a broad approach that sequences the DNA in a sample much more broadly—across the entire tree of life and across the genome.

Chromatin tracking reveals two motion modes that help control gene expression

Gene expression is controlled, in part, by the interactions between genes and regulatory elements located along the genome. Those interactions depend on the ability of chromatin—a mix of DNA and proteins—to move around within a crowded space. In a new study, MIT researchers have measured chromatin movement at timescales ranging from hundreds of microseconds to hours, allowing them to rigorously quantify those dynamics for the first time.

Their analysis revealed that chromatin can exist in two different categories: In one, chromatin moves in a constrained way that allows it to primarily contact only neighboring regions of the genome; in the other, chromatin moves more freely and contacts regions that are farther away, but only over longer timescales.

The findings offer insight into how gene expression is regulated, as well as how chromatin segments come together for other processes such as DNA repair, the researchers say.

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