Researchers have created the first complete description of early embryo development, accounting for every single cell in the embryo. This ‘virtual embryo’ will help to answer how the different cell …read more Source:: Science
Tag: answer
First childhood flu helps explain why virus hits some people harder than others
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•Why are some people better able to fight off the flu than others? Part of the answer, according to a new study, is related to the first flu strain we …read more Source:: Science
CircleCI automates Continuous Delivery to multiple clouds
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•Today’s companies use CI/CD to speedily deploy software updates, but that last step, from your pipeline to a cloud service, can be tricky. CircleCI has an answer. …read more Source:: Linux
Largest-ever ancient-DNA study illuminates millennia of South and Central Asian prehistory
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•Researchers analyzed the genomes of 524 never before-studied ancient people, including the first genome of an individual from the ancient Indus Valley Civilization. Insights answer longstanding questions about the origins …read more Source:: Science
Chimpanzees’ working memory similar to ours
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•Some scientists argue that working memory is particularly developed in humans. But how do chimpanzees, one of our closest relatives, compare? Researchers set out to answer this question. …read more Source:: Science
Programming language Python’s ‘existential threat’ is app distribution: Is this the answer?
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•New tool aims to bring Python apps on Windows, Mac, and Linux to users who’ve never heard of Python. …read more Source:: Linux
Magma is the key to the moon’s makeup
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•For more than a century, scientists have squabbled over how Earth’s moon formed. Now researchers say they may have the answer. …read more Source:: Science
Are brown dwarfs failed stars or super-planets?
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•Brown dwarfs fill the ‘gap’ between stars and the much smaller planets. But how they originate has yet to be fully explained. Astronomers may now be able to answer that …read more Source:: Science
Fossilized slime of 100-million-year-old hagfish shakes up vertebrate family tree
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•Paleontologists have discovered the first detailed fossil of a hagfish, the slimy, eel-like carrion feeders of the ocean. The 100-million-year-old fossil helps answer questions about when these ancient, jawless fish …read more Source:: Science
Where did the hot Neptunes go? A shrinking planet holds the answer
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•‘Where did the hot Neptunes go?’ This is the question astronomers have been asking for a long time, faced with the mysterious absence of planets the size of Neptune. Researchers …read more Source:: Science