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14 Results:
white blood cell
6 m
Article
Medicine
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How do you take down super bug bacteria?

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 28, 2017
It's possible you may have heard in the news, or from your friends, that antibiotics are becoming less powerful over time as the bacteria they are designed to attack evolve the ability to resist attacks. A team of researchers from the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, have been working on re-designing a 60-year-old antibiotic called Vancomycin so that the dangerous 'super-bog' enterococci can no longer resist it, and progress looks favourable. Check out the BBC Health article
Earth as seen from space
10 m
Article
Space
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The next generation of Earth Observation: Earth-i

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 28, 2017
A new company called Earth-i has announced it will be launching a constellation of satellites into Earth's orbit that will download "fast-turn-around pictures and colour video of the planet's surface."
Jo Lancaster, one of the first to use an ejection seat in an aircraft
3 m
Article
Aviation
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Inside the ejector seat

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 28, 2017
The ejection seat is ubiquitous nowadays in military fighter crafts, but it wasn't always so. Jo Lancaster became one of the first to use an ejection seat 70 years ago. This great video from BBC Science News explains the engineering behind early ejection seats.
3 m
Article
Aviation
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More Test Flights for Airlander 10

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 23, 2017
The Airlander 10, combination plane and airship, is the world's longest aircraft measured at 92 meters long. It took to the air recently for its fourth test flight, reaching a height of 1,067 meters. The developer, Hybrid Air Vehicles, is saying it might be how we all get around one day. Thoughts?
An image of the Bloodhound SSC rocket car
Article
Engineering & Technology
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Bloodhound Diary: Learning from the past

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 23, 2017
This article is written by Andy Green, the world land speed record holder, and the driver of the Bloodhound SSC; the car that will attempt to reach 1,000 mph sometime in 2018. In this article, Green gives a quick overview of the engineering work that's been done so far as they design the car that will push the limits.
A tree.
7 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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What is the Oldest Living Organism on Earth?

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 23, 2017
"What's the oldest tree or other living organism on Earth?" That question was posed to BBC Crowd Science, and it turns out it's a difficult question to answer. The oldest confirmed organism is a bristlecone pine tree in California that's 5,067 years old. But its possible there are a few other organisms on the planet that are much older.
A wolf.
5 m
Article
Sciences
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A Sense of Fair Play in Dogs and Wolves

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Aug 23, 2017
Have you ever been in a situation where you and a friend/colleague both performed the same task but only the colleague got praise for it? It's frustrating isn't it? And if it happens over and over you might even stop working with them. Turns out, dogs do this too, and so do wolves. A new study in the journal Current Biology has found that dogs and wolves both have a strong "sensitivity to inequity." Funny enough, dogs actually are less sensitive to it, likely because, from a dog's point of view
A photograph of the mandible of the newly discovered homo sapiens fossils
10 m
Article
Social Science & Culture
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The History of Homo Sapiens' Origin has Changed

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jul 25, 2017
Researchers from the Max Plank Institute in Germany have found humanoid fossils at a site in Jebel Irhoud, Morocco that are anatomically similar to homo sapiens and are measured to be approximately 315,000 years old. That is over 100,000 years older than the previously known oldest human remains, found in Ethiopia. This evidence completely changes our understanding of where and how-quickly homo sapiens emerged onto the African scene.
An image inside the Large Hadron Collider.
4 m
Article
Sciences
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Scientists at CERN have Discovered a New Particle

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jul 6, 2017
Researchers at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) have discovered a new particle, called Xi-cc++. The name doesn't roll off the tongue very well, but the discovery will help understand how the nuclei of atoms hold themselves together. There are four fundamental forces in the Universe: the weak force, the strong force, the electromagnetic force, and the gravitational force. The strong force is responsible for holding the nucleus of an atom together; for example, a regular helium atom's nucleus has
A bat.
5 m
Article
Earth & Environment
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Deploying "Shazam for Bats" in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, London.

Profile picture for user Jesse Rogerson
Jesse Rogerson, PhD
Canada Aviation and Space Museum
Jun 30, 2017
An international collaboration of scientists have deployed a network of sensors in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, London. What do the sensors measure? Sound! Ultrasonic bat calls to be specific. When the sensors hear a bat call, which is beyond the hearing of a human, they automatically attempt to determine the species. The data is uploaded to the cloud, and researchers are then able to keep track of the variety of bat species in the park. This experiment is in its early stages, but ultimately
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