Copy
Creative stuff, weekly collection
<<First Name>>, here is your copy.

View this email in your browser

The Boys Who Only Develop A Penis When They Hit The Age Of 12


  When born, to all intents and purposes they appear to be female. But when the children referred to as “Guevedoces” in an isolated village in the Dominica

Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.iflscience.com

The post The Boys Who Only Develop A Penis When They Hit The Age Of 12 appeared first on Antonios Bouris.


Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like The Boys Who Only Develop A Penis When They Hit The Age Of 12 on Facebook

If The Universe Is 13.8 Billion Years Old, How Can We See 46 Billion Light Years Away?


There are a few fundamental facts about the Universe — its origin, its history, and what it is today — that are awfully hard to wrap your head around.

 

There are a few fundamental facts about the Universe — its origin, its history, and what it is today — that are awfully hard to wrap your head around. One of them is the Big Bang, or the idea that the Universe began a certain time ago: 13.8 billion years ago to be precise. That’s the first moment we can describe the Universe as we know it to be today: full of matter and radiation, and the ingredients that would eventually grow into stars, galaxies, planets and human beings. So how far away can we see? You might think, in a Universe limited by the speed of light, that would be 13.8 billion light years: the age of the Universe multiplied by the speed of light. But 13.8 billion light years is far too small to be the right answer. In actuality, we can see for 46 billion light years in all directions, for a total diameter of 92 billion light years.

Sourced through Scoop.it from: medium.com

The post If The Universe Is 13.8 Billion Years Old, How Can We See 46 Billion Light Years Away? appeared first on Antonios Bouris.


Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like If The Universe Is 13.8 Billion Years Old, How Can We See 46 Billion Light Years Away? on Facebook

Climate change: From the beginning, models have been remarkably accurate


There are dozens of disciplines and subdisciplines within the broad ambit of climate science, studying everything from ancient geology to the spread of disease. But one discipline in particular is exposed to intense public scrutiny, the subject of long-running political and legal disputes: modeling.

As interesting as the details of climate science may be, what society most needs from it is an answer to a simple question: What the hell is going to happen? What are we in for? That’s the question models seek to answer.

Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.vox.com

The post Climate change: From the beginning, models have been remarkably accurate appeared first on Antonios Bouris.


Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like Climate change: From the beginning, models have been remarkably accurate on Facebook

NASA: The first map showing the global geology of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan


The first map showing the global geology of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, has been completed and fully reveals a dynamic world of dunes, lakes, plains, craters and other terrains. Titan is the only planetary body in our solar system other than Earth known to have stable liquid on its surface. But instead of water raining down from clouds and filling lakes and seas as on Earth, on Titan what rains down is methane and ethane – hydrocarbons that we think of as gases but that behave as liquids in Titan’s frigid climate.

 

“Titan has an active methane-based hydrologic cycle that has shaped a complex geologic landscape, making its surface one of most geologically diverse in the solar system,” said Rosaly Lopes, a planetary geologist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and lead author of new research used to develop the map.

 

 

Sourced through Scoop.it from: solarsystem.nasa.gov

The post NASA: The first map showing the global geology of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan appeared first on Antonios Bouris.


Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like NASA: The first map showing the global geology of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan on Facebook

The ESA Is Sending a Robotic Junk Collector Into Space


The European Space Agency has officially approved funding for ClearSpace-1 — the world’s first mission dedicated to cleaning up space junk.

Sourced through Scoop.it from: futurism.com

The post The ESA Is Sending a Robotic Junk Collector Into Space appeared first on Antonios Bouris.


Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like The ESA Is Sending a Robotic Junk Collector Into Space on Facebook

How AI Sees the World — Image Recognition & Algorithmic Bias


Humans are able to see from birth, so we often take it for granted. Trying to teach a machine to see from scratch, however, is a whole other ballpark. But first, what even is “seeing” in the first place?

 

Vision has three parts:

  1. Being able to physically “see” the object in front of you
  2. Understanding and recognizing what it is
  3. Being able to respond to it

 

In humans, this process corresponds to our eyes being able to see what is in front of us, then our brains recognizing what it is.

 

 

Sourced through Scoop.it from: medium.com

The post How AI Sees the World — Image Recognition & Algorithmic Bias appeared first on Antonios Bouris.


Read in browser »
share on Twitter Like How AI Sees the World — Image Recognition & Algorithmic Bias on Facebook


 

Recent Articles:

What Is Parallax? – How Astronomers Measure Stellar Distance | Space
After 42 years in space, Voyager 2 breaks thru the heliosphere
Physicists Have Identified a Metal That Conducts Electricity But Not Heat
Neptune-sized planet orbiting a white dwarf provides first evidence a planet can survive death of its star
Helping machines to perceive laws of physics by themselves
Copyright © 2019 @Design Thinking, All rights reserved.


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences 

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp
Email
Email
Website
Website
Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
LinkedIn
LinkedIn
Instagram
Instagram
Tumblr
Tumblr
Pinterest
Pinterest
YouTube
YouTube