Using genetic tools in mice, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have identified a pair of proteins that precisely control when sound-detecting cells, known as hair cells, are born in the mammalian inner ear. The proteins, described in a report published June 12 in eLife, may hold a key to future therapies to restore hearing in people with irreversible deafness.
“Scientists in our field have long been looking for the molecular signals that trigger the formation of the hair cells that sense and transmit sound,” says Angelika Doetzlhofer, Ph.D., associate professor of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “These hair cells are a major player in hearing loss, and knowing more about how they develop will help us figure out ways to replace hair cells that are damaged.”
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i get a LOT of questions about time management and getting better grades so i decided to put a boat load of advice and links in one place :]
time management methods
start a bullet journal ( +mine / +insp )
the 5 day study plan - it works!
schedule blocks of study time
use excel to schedule study
how to schedule study
the sticky note method
an app that organizes time for u
15 ways to beat procrastination
balancing multiple AP classes
decision making and time management
use the pomodoro technique
the task box prioritizing method
how to cram a lot of information in
get organized!!!!!
make and use a syllabible
great organization advice
organize ur study space
more tips on study spaces
basic organization tips
cute infographic
printable planner sheets
simple 2 pocket folder method
study methods!!!
watch youtube crashcourses
best study tips ever tbh
tips on memorizing effectively
add color for visual interest
make cause and effect diagrams
making good flashcards
create summary foldables
margin note taking
the 2 notebook method
for when ur not motivated
reading long textbook passages
studying for a test ooh
basic note taking
+note taking tips
note taking in microsoft word
bs study guide
how to plan out an essay
more essay planning
annotating literature for english
how to make concept maps
really interesting way of studying
shit load of study methods
web resources!!!!
search engine that plants trees!
to do list web program
bedtime calculator [avoid grogginess]
the dictionaries u need omg
how to pull an all nighter
advice on how to properly use google
final grade calculator
>100 places to download literature
cute af school supply list
alternatives to overpriced textbooks
rly this is better than google
best writing checker ever its my fave
free academic journals for research
AP cramming packets
every website to make a bibliography
online used book store
mind map making software from tufts
khanacademy aka bless this site
stop procrastinating websites
free powerpoint
awesome synonym finder
apps u need to download!!!
google chrome app i love it
taking digital notes
like 14 useful school apps
attn: all writers get this
super cute time manager
>9 different studying apps
post it note app
study + give water to needy!!
relaxation n meditation help
sat help!!!!!
all kinds of essential vocab [2k+]
big collection of links
v solid page with lots of references
rly good advice imo
how to do well on the sat
general big exam advices
stress reliefs!!!!
rly good study snacks
badass instrumental playlist!
finish ur essay songs!
+all my fave study playlists!
treat urself on a low budget
read some rad articles
teach urself computer science
take the 10 day study challenge
rip some crap online
good things to do in study breaks
+100 more things in study breaks
if u tired and uninspired
avoid student burnout
watch a ton of broadway musicals
nice things for urself
anxiety relieving background sound
+masterposts!!!
back to school advice
productive summers
note taking methods
starting a study blog
time managements
succeed @ school
ap world history
study instagram
web resources
ap psychology
bullet journals
school advice
happy things
ace ur exams
study sounds
stress reliefs
annotations
essay writin
study 101
printables
sat help
+more
i hope some of this was helpful ~ i also have a youtube channel and instagram account with a whole bunch of study resources!!!! ~ xoxo sareena
This colorful view from NASA’s Cassini mission is the highest-resolution view of the unique six-sided jet stream at Saturn’s north pole known as “the hexagon.” This movie, made from images obtained by Cassini’s imaging cameras, is the first to show the hexagon in color filters, and the first movie to show a complete view from the north pole down to about 70 degrees north latitude.
Via NASA: In Full View: Saturn’s Streaming Hexagon
Sleep is your superpower | Matt Walker
Sleep is your life-support system and Mother Nature’s best effort yet at immortality, says sleep scientist Matt Walker. In this deep dive into the science of slumber, Walker shares the wonderfully good things that happen when you get sleep – and the alarmingly bad things that happen when you don’t, for both your brain and body. Learn more about sleep’s impact on your learning, memory, immune system and even your genetic code – as well as some helpful tips for getting some shut-eye.
For the first time in almost a decade, we’re going back to Jupiter. Our Juno spacecraft arrives at the king of planets on the fourth of July. From a unique polar orbit, Juno will repeatedly dive between the planet and its intense belts of charged particle radiation. Juno’s primary goal is to improve our understanding of Jupiter’s formation and evolution, which will help us understand the history of our own solar system and provide new insight into how other planetary systems form.
In anticipation, here are a few things you need to know about the Juno mission and the mysterious world it will explore:
1. This is the Big One
The most massive planet in our solar system, with dozens of moons and an enormous magnetic field, Jupiter rules over a kind of miniature solar system.
2. Origin Story
Why study Jupiter in the first place? How does the planet fit into the solar system as a whole? What is it hiding? How will Juno unlock its secrets? A series of brief videos tells the stories of Jupiter and Juno. Watch them HERE.
3. Eyes on Juno
If you really want a hands-on understanding of Juno’s flight through the Jupiter system, there’s no better tool than the “Eyes on Juno” online simulation. It uses data from the mission to let you realistically see and interact with the spacecraft and its trajectory—in 3D and across both time and space.
4. You’re on JunoCam!
Did you know that you don’t have to work for NASA to contribute to the Juno mission? Amateur astronomers and space enthusiasts everywhere are invited to help with JunoCam, the mission’s color camera. You can upload your own images of Jupiter, comment on others’ images, and vote on which pictures JunoCam will take when it reaches the Jovian system.
5. Ride Along
It’s easy to follow events from the Juno mission as they unfold. Here are several ways to follow along online:
Want to learn more? Read our full list of the 10 things to know this week about the solar system HERE.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
Group Of Galaxies Called “Stephan’s Quintet.” The Quintet Is A Prototype of A Class Of Objects Known As ‘Compact Groups Of Galaxies
Can you explain in a simple (???) way gravitational waves? please? do you know any books about it?
Sure!
According to Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity, what we think of as "empty space” isn’t nothing. Instead, space is more like a fabric that can be stretched, squashed, bent and shaped, and all matter and energy cause space to bend around them. The more mass or energy something has, the greater the bending of space around it it causes, a bit like heavier and lighter balls on a rubber sheet:
(Source - Note that this picture is a 2D analogy, and space is actually 3D! The bending of space isn’t something we can easily visualise, so we have to use analogies like the “balls on a rubber sheet” analogy - as long as we recognise their shortcomings!)
Let’s imagine the Sun is a bowling ball dropped onto a rubber sheet, creating a huge dent in space. And now let’s roll a marble - Earth - onto that sheet too. IF the marble is rolling too slowly, it will fall into the dent and roll around a few times, spiralling in and eventually colliding with the ball. If the marble is rolling too quickly, its path will be bent, but it will escape. If it’s rolling at a certain speed, however, the marble will roll around the bowling ball and go into orbit around it. (Here’s another shortcoming of the rubber sheet analogy - real rubber sheets have friction, so the marble would eventually slow down and roll in towards the bowling ball. Space, however, has no friction, so the Earth can stay in orbit around the Sun for a long time.) In other words, this bending of space is what we refer to as gravity!
In Newton’s view of gravity, Earth would naturally follow a straight line through space, but its path would be bent towards the Sun by a mysterious pulling force. That force holds the planets in orbit around the Sun and pulls apples to Earth, but Newton couldn’t explain why - a mysterious influence that spread out through space, called the gravitational field, somehow caused bodies to attract one another. Einstein explained that massive objects curve the space around them. Earth would also naturally follow a straight line through space, but the space itself is curved, forcing Earth to follow a curved path - it’s a bit like trying to walk in a straight line along a hill. Try as you might, your path will have to bend to follow the contours of the landscape. According to Einstein, gravity isn’t really a “force” as such but an effect of this bending of space. Matter and energy tell space how to bend; space tells matter and energy how to move. That’s all gravity is. The gravitational field isn’t some mysterious entity in space - the gravitational field is the space itself! Here’s a nice little video to help you visualise all this:
(I’m oversimplifying a little, btw, saying that gravity is the bending of “space.” In Einstein’s theory, the three dimensions of space are unified with time into one four-dimensional fabric, the space-time continuum. So gravity isn’t just the bending of space, but the warping of time too - you can’t change one without changing the other! Gravity actually slows time down, so you would age slightly faster in space than you do at Earth’s surface. The difference is incredibly tiny, but measurable - time passes more quickly for the GPS satellites than it does for us here on Earth, and what the clock of a GPS satellite would measure as “one day” is about 38 microseconds shorter than what we measure as “one day.” That doesn’t sound like a big difference, but engineers have to take it into account when designing GPS systems - if they didn’t account for this, your GPS location would drift by as much as 10 kilometres per day! So this isn’t just some abstract theory - this is a real effect that’s already important for technology you probably use every day.)
General Relativity has now been through many, many tests and has passed every one with flying colours, and all of its predictions had been verified by the beginning of 2016 except one - gravitational waves.
What would happen if we could somehow destroy the Sun? Newton believed that there was a mysterious gravitational connection between the Sun and Earth, holding Earth in its orbit, that would instantly be broken if the Sun was destroyed. Earth would instantly fly out of its orbit in a straight line. Einstein, however, didn’t like this - his Special Theory of Relativity (which he put out 10 years before the General Theory) says that no information could ever travel faster than light. It takes about 8 minutes for the Sun’s light to reach us, so how could Earth fly out of its orbit instantly? That would let us know the Sun had been destroyed 8 minutes before the light from the Sun’s destruction reached us. Einstein wasn’t comfortable with this.
Thankfully, General Relativity resolves the paradox - if you got rid of the Sun, Earth would still stay in its orbit for a while, because the space-time around the Sun would still be curved. Meanwhile, at the place where the Sun was, space-time would spring back to its original flat state, and that would ripple through the surrounding space-time as everything adjusted back to where it was. That ripple - a gravitational wave - would spread out through space at the speed of light, so the space around Earth would stay curved and Earth would remain in its orbit until the same time the light from the Sun’s destruction passed us - at which point the gravitational wave would ripple through the space around Earth and restore it back to its original flat state, and Earth would finally leave its orbit.
Of course, in reality, stars don’t just disappear. But the gravitational environment does change. Stars move around, and the fabric of space-time also moves with them. Stars explode. Black holes and neutron stars form, putting huge dents in space-time, and sometimes they collide. All these events are a bit like changing the environment in a still pond - stars and planets gently orbiting are like ducks gently gliding through the pond, creating gentle ripples as they disturb its surface - and black hole collisions are more like throwing a rock into the pond and sending out massive waves. Almost everything in our universe produces gravitational waves, but most of the time, they’re too tiny to detect. (That’s why I said in real space the Earth can orbit the Sun for “a long time,” and not “forever.” Earth is constantly sending out very faint gravitational waves as it rolls around the Sun and moves through the fabric of space-time. Those waves are too small to detect, but they very, very slowly sap Earth’s energy and cause it to very, very slowly spiral in to the Sun. In reality, that would take unimaginable trillions upon trillions of years, and Earth will probably be destroyed by the dying Sun long before that! Even if Earth manages to survive that, it’s more likely to be pulled out of orbit by an incredibly rare passing star or knocked out by unpredictable gravitational tugs from the other planets or something before it spirals into the Sun. Orbits are stable for a very, very, very, very long time.) More intense sources of gravity than our puny Earth and Sun, however - things like neutron stars and black holes - can generate detectable gravitational waves.
Our first indirect evidence of gravitational waves came in 1984, when the American astronomers Russel A. Hulse and Joseph A. Taylor discovered a binary neutron star system - two intense sources of gravity orbiting each other very rapidly. As they orbited each other, they sent out huge gravitational ripples - a bit like stirring up that duck pond with two oars whirling round and round - and lost energy by a detectable amount. Hulse and Taylor found that their orbital period slowed down by about 75 milliseconds per year - short, but detectable! That slowing exactly matched the predictions of gravitational wave theory and got its discoverers the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1993.
(Source)
But gravitational waves weren’t directly observed until 2015 (and confirmed until this year) by a detector named LIGO (the Laser Interferometer Gravitational wave Observatory). All LIGO is is basically two beams of laser light travelling between two pairs of mirrors oriented at right angles to each other, like this, so you can measure how space-time is stretched in one direction and squashed in the other by a passing gravitational wave by recording how long it takes the light to travel from one mirror to the other*:
(Source for both images: http://phys.org/news/2016-02-ligo.html)
LIGO’s two “arms” (the two beams of light) are each 4 kilometres long, and a gravitational wave passing through the detector stretches or squashes each of the “arms” by a ridiculously small amount - the ones LIGO actually found stretched and about 1/10,000th the width of a proton. As you can imagine, the LIGO physicists had to account for many, many different effects that shook the detector too. But gravitational waves distort the two beams in a predictable way that would make that distortion stand out from ordinary passing trucks or distant earthquakes, and by February 11th, 2016, the LIGO physicists were confident enough that they really had detected a faint ripple in space-time passing through their detector. The signal was consistent with a gravitational wave from two black holes in orbit around each other, spiralling in to one another.
(Source)
This is exciting for two reasons:1) It confirms the last outstanding prediction of General Relativity, and2) It opens up a whole new field of astronomy! Every so often astronomy is revolutionised by the discovery of new things we can look at from space. Originally all we could detect was the visible light that we could see with our eyes and telescopes. But soon we learned to build radio telescopes, and that opened up a whole new world to us - we could see phenomena that were invisible in ordinary light. With space telescopes we could see the sky in gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet and infra-red light as well. Now we could see the explosions of distant stars halfway across the observable Universe, look at clouds of gas and dust too cool to shine in visible light, and peer through other dark clouds to see stars forming inside. We also found particles we could see coming from space, too - neutrinos from the Sun and from supernovae, and cosmic rays. These opened up other windows on the Universe. And now we have gravitational waves - yet another new way of “seeing.” Gravitational wave astronomy will let us study some of the most puzzling events in the Universe, like colliding neutron stars, or black holes falling into other black holes - events we’ve never been able to see before.
So I hope that helps, Anon!
As for books, the problem is gravitational waves were detected so recently I don’t know of any books that have come out since then on the subject, so everything will be out of date. However, the basic physics has stayed the same since Einstein first predicted them, so any good popular book on general relativity (Spacewarps by John Gribbin, The Fabric of the Cosmos by Brian Greene and Travelling At the Speed of Thought: Einstein and the Quest for Gravitational Waves by Daniel Kennefick are good examples) should give you some good insight - just replace phrases like “if we detect gravitational waves” with “when we detected gravitational waves!”
(*Yes, yes, I know LIGO isn’t actually measuring the time taken for light to travel down each “arm,” but the interference of the laser beams. Still, that interference allows us to infer the travel time for the light, so I’m simplifying.)
NASA’s announcement today was awe-inspiring. We’ve compiled the essential info you want to know about this incredible discovery.
OVERVIEW: 7 PLANETS, 3 HABITABLE
Astronomers have found at least seven Earth-sized planets orbiting the same star 40 light-years away, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature.
The seven exoplanets were all found in tight formation around an ultracool dwarf star called TRAPPIST-1. Estimates of their mass also indicate that they are rocky planets, rather than being gaseous like Jupiter. Three planets are in the habitable zone of the star, known as TRAPPIST-1e, f and g, and may even have oceans on the surface.
“I think we’ve made a crucial step towards finding if there is life out there,” said Amaury Triaud, one of the study authors and an astronomer at the University of Cambridge. “I don’t think any time before we had the right planets to discover and find out if there was (life). Here, if life managed to thrive and releases gases similar to what we have on Earth, we will know.”
ONLY 40 LIGHT YEARS AWAY
The system is just 40 light-years away. On a cosmic scale, that’s right next door. Of course, practically speaking, it would still take us hundreds of millions of years to get there with today’s technology – but again, it is notable in that the find speaks volumes about the potential for life-as-we-know-it beyond Earth.
The Hubble Space Telescope is already being used to search for atmospheres around the planets, and Emmanuël Jehin, a scientist who also worked on the research, asserts that future telescopes could allow us to truly see into the heart of this system: “With the upcoming generation of telescopes, such as ESO’s European Extremely Large Telescope and the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope, we will soon be able to search for water and perhaps even evidence of life on these worlds.”
ALIEN SKIES
In contrast to our sun, the TRAPPIST-1 star – classified as an ultra-cool dwarf – is so cool that liquid water could survive on planets orbiting very close to it, closer than is possible on planets in our solar system. All seven of the TRAPPIST-1 planetary orbits are closer to their host star than Mercury is to our sun. The planets also are very close to each other. If a person was standing on one of the planet’s surface, they could gaze up and potentially see geological features or clouds of neighboring worlds, which would sometimes appear larger than the moon in Earth’s sky.
The planets may also be tidally locked to their star, which means the same side of the planet is always facing the star, therefore each side is either perpetual day or night. This could mean they have weather patterns totally unlike those on Earth, such as strong winds blowing from the day side to the night side, and extreme temperature changes.
WOW!!
This computer-simulated image shows a supermassive black hole at the core of a galaxy. The black region in the center represents the black hole’s event horizon, where no light can escape the massive object’s gravitational grip. The black hole’s powerful gravity distorts space around it like a funhouse mirror. Light from background stars is stretched and smeared as the stars skim by the black hole.
Credits: NASA, ESA, and D. Coe, J. Anderson, and R. van der Marel (STScI)
Full Story at Hubble Space Telescope/NASA.- Behemoth Black Hole Found in an Unlikely Place
High-res images at HubbleSite.org
The Lagoon Nebula - M8 in Infrared
The Lagoon Nebula (also known as Messier 8/M8 or NGC 6523) is a giant interstellar cloud and emission nebula located in the constellation Sagittarius approximately 5,000 light-year from earth. The nebula contains a number of Bok globules, which can be seen as dark, collapsing clouds of gaseous material. This Particular image shows a star forming central region in infrared and was captured by the VISTA telescope at ESO’s Paranal Observatory in Chile.
Credit: ESO/VISTA
What is a "nebula"?
A nebula is a large cloud of dust and gas that are star-forming regions. They’re formed when a star dies and its outer layers expand, creating a colourful cloud of gas. In other cases, they’re formed when a star goes supernova (when a really big and bright star dies and explodes).
There are emission nebulae, reflection nebulae and dark nebulae. Emission nebulae are close enough to a star that the gas particles absorb the UV light, get excited and emit their own light. Reflection nebulae are when a nebulae isn’t close enough to a star to absorb it’s UV light so it just reflects it. Dark nebulae aren’t close enough to a star to either absorb it’s light nor reflect it. The only way a dark nebulae is visible is if there’s a star behind it that can act as a backdrop, illuminating the back of the nebulae.
This is a studyblr for everyone have some passion for science, especially astronomy and biology
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