• Darren@sopuli.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    I dunno whether it counts: but that science has effectively cured AIDS.

    In 2004, 2.1m people died from it. Twenty years later that figure was a little over a quarter at 630k. The goal for 2025 is 250k. I think that’s absolutely remarkable.

    As a child in the 80s I was terrified of AIDS. It made me low-key scared of gay men because the news made it sound like I could I could get it from any one of them. And here we now are, able to provide a medication that can almost completely ensure that you will never be infected by HIV.

    Astonishing, really.

  • eponymous_anonymous@sh.itjust.works
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    11 hours ago

    Retinal photosynthesis, also known as the Purple Earth Theory. Colours are weird. Earth plants absorb red and blue light, they look green to us because that’s the wavelength of light that cannot be used by the chloroplasts.

    It’s hypothesized that this was advantageous on Earth because blue light goes further into water than the other wavelengths, facilitating the development of photosynthetic algae

    Retinal photosynthesis is another viable chemical chain reaction that could be used to create ATP (usable biological energy) from light.

    It’s another molecule similar to chlorophyll, but it absorbs green light instead of red/blue - alien planets might be purple!

    There’s a viable parallel evolutionary pathway that leads to plants with magenta leaves

  • FeelzGoodMan420@eviltoast.org
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    17 hours ago

    When the moon is at its farthest orbit from earth, all of the planets in the solar system can fit in between earth and the moon.

  • lime!@feddit.nu
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    23 hours ago

    the implication of einsteins mass-energy equivalence formula is mind-blowing to me. one gram of mass, if perfectly converted to energy, makes 25 GWh. that means half the powerplants in my country could be replaced with this theoretical “mass converter” going through a gram of fuel an hour. that’s under 10 kilograms of fuel a year.

    a coal plant goes through tons of fuel a day.

    energy researchers, get on it

    • bradboimler@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      For the sake of discussion, let’s say on the one hand a magic man intelligently designed life and all that. And on the other hand we have it arise and evolve over the course of billions of years of random atomic interactions and genetic mutations. I honestly find the second one far more amazing, wondrous, amazing, and mind blowing.

  • ThatWeirdGuy1001@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    The fact that there is no discernable difference between an alive body or a dead body when it comes to chemical makeup.

    All the pieces are there. All the atoms and molecules are still in the same places. Yet despite this the body is still dead.

    • LouNeko@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      To be fair, a perfectly fine but dead body is impossible to observe since the process of dying is usually the result or accumulation of injuries or disfunctions. For this experiment you either have to kill somebody without altering their body in the slightest or instantly conjure a perfectly intact body without any life in it.

    • CarrotsHaveEars@lemmy.ml
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      22 hours ago

      When you say “All the atoms and molecules are still in the same places”, I can’t say I agree. It is the change of chemical composition that renders our body dead. Or should I say, death is defined to be such a chemical composition.

  • spittingimage@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    The fact that planes are kept in the air by the shape of their wings, which forces air to go over at a pace when it can’t push down on the wing as hard as it can push up from underneath. It’s like discovering an exploitable glitch in a videogame and every time I fly I worry that the universe will get patched while I’m at 10,000 feet.

  • Thorry84@feddit.nl
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    2 days ago

    A Planck length is the smallest length possible, a smaller length simply can’t exist.

    At least that’s what scientists believed until they studied OPs penis, then they found out something smaller does in fact exist.

  • ClassifiedPancake@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    The size of the universe and the distance between everything in it. It takes about 8 minutes for light from our own sun to reach us. And the observable universe is about 5,859,000,000,000,000,000 times larger than that! That is quite a trip. I would need about 293,283,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 charging stops with my electric car to get to the end. I think I’ll pass.

    (Someone smarter than me will probably find out that my math is wrong)

    • BorgDrone
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      9 hours ago

      It’s so absurdly big. Our galaxy (the Milky Way) is estimated to have between 100 and 400 billion stars in it. For a long time we thought our galaxy was all there was, it wasn’t until 1925 when Edwin Hubble was able to prove that M31 was not a nebula or cluster of stars in our galaxy, but in fact an entirely different galaxy altogether that we realized there are more galaxies out there.

      Look at the Hubble Ultra Deep Field picture

      This was a taken by pointing the Hubble Space Telescope at a basically empty bit of space 2.4 by 2.4 arcminutes in size (for comparison, the moon has an apparent size of about 30 arcminutes, or half a degree). So an absolutely tiny part of the sky. It contains about 10.000 galaxies.

      The observable universe is estimated to have between 200 billion and 2 trillion galaxies in it, with on average about 100 billion stars per galaxy. It’s absolutely mind blowing.

    • Kacarott@aussie.zone
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      24 hours ago

      What I find mind blowing about the scale of the universe, is that on a logarithmic scale from the smallest possible thing to the largest possible thing, humans live at almost the exact centre.

  • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    You can observe the chirality of some molecules from the crystals they form, sometimes they twist clockwise, other times they twist counter clockwise. Which way they twist is dependent on their molecular structure.