A surprising Bulls lineup that could play important minutes
The Chicago Bulls will look to emerge as legitimate threats in the East next season. It could take some lineup creativity on Billy Donovan's part.
2023-09-26 03:23
DeSantis and Newsom to go head-to-head in November Fox News debate moderated by Sean Hannity
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is taking time out from debating fellow 2024 Republican presidential contenders to take on a Democrat, California Gov. Gavin Newsom
2023-09-26 03:23
Taylor Swift showing up to the Chiefs game had fans going wild
Taylor Swift showing up to the Chiefs game had fans going wild
2023-09-26 03:21
Scientists develop simple test to help us find alien life
Scientists have developed a simple test in the search for alien life, they claim. The breakthrough helps the search for the “holy grail” of astrobiology: a reliable test that will determine whether there is or was life on other planets. The discovery uses artificial intelligence to determine with 90 per cent accuracy whether a sample is biological or not. And it could be used on existing samples, researchers say. That might mean, for instance, that we already have gathered the samples that could tell us whether there is life on Mars. Scientists hope that their test could be used on samples already collected by the Mars Curiosity rover’s Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument. The rover has an instrument on board to analyse those samples, and that data could be used in the test. The findings could also help tell us more about our own planet, revealing the history of mysterious and ancient rocks found on Earth. “The search for extraterrestrial life remains one of the most tantalizing endeavors in modern science,” said lead author Jim Cleaves of the Earth and Planets Laboratory, Carnegie Institution for Science, Washington, DC. “The implications of this new research are many, but there are three big takeaways: First, at some deep level, biochemistry differs from abiotic organic chemistry; second, we can look at Mars and ancient Earth samples to tell if they were once alive; and third, it is likely this new method could distinguish alternative biospheres from those of Earth, with significant implications for future astrobiology missions.” The technique does not look for specific molecules or compounds that could be indicative of life, as much previous work has done. Instead, it looks for small differences in the molecular patterns of samples using different kinds of analysis. It was built by giving an artificial intelligent system data about 134 known samples, with information about whether they are biotic or abiotic. To test it, it was then given new samples – including those from living things, remnants of ancient life and other abiotic samples that did not point to life, such as pure chemicals – and identified them with 90 per cent accuracy. The system also started predicting another kind of sample type, dividing the biotic ones into “living” and “fossils”. That means it could tell the difference between a freshly harvested leaf and something else that died long ago, for instance. Scientists hope that with time it could eventually be able to distinguish other hints in the data, such as signs of photosynthesis or cells that have a nucleus. Previous research has struggled because organic molecules tend t degrade over time. But the new method works even when the samples have decayed and changed significantly, the researchers behind it said. “This routine analytical method has the potential to revolutionize the search for extraterrestrial life and deepen our understanding of both the origin and chemistry of the earliest life on Earth,” said Robert Hazen, of the Carnegie Institution for Science, one of the leaders of the research. “It opens the way to using smart sensors on robotic spacecraft, landers and rovers to search for signs of life before the samples return to Earth.” The findings could also help solve mysteries on life. Many ancient rocks on Earth are at the middle of argument over whether they hold the oldest fossil microbes in life, while others say they do not have any life – and researchers are already feeding data about those rocks from Australia, Canada and elsewhere into the tool. “We’re applying our methods right now to address these long-standing questions about the biogenicity of the organic material in these rocks,” Hazen says. A paper describing the work, ‘A robust, agnostic biosignature based on machine learning’, is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Read More New discovery is ‘holy grail’ breakthrough in search for aliens, scientist say Nasa has gathered a large piece of a distant asteroid. What now? Nasa spots shocking number of galaxies like our own New discovery is ‘holy grail’ breakthrough in search for aliens, scientist say Nasa has gathered a large piece of a distant asteroid. What now? Nasa spots shocking number of galaxies like our own
2023-09-26 03:19
Brazil's central bank employees escalate protests over career demands
BRASILIA Brazil's central bank employees said on Monday they would intensify work stoppages in protest of the government's
2023-09-26 03:19
Trump campaigns in South Carolina after a weekend spent issuing threats and leveling treason claims
Former President Donald Trump has returned to campaigning in South Carolina after a weekend spent issuing threats to the press, leveling multiple accusations of treason and claiming he could design a better fighter jet than the military
2023-09-26 03:16
Ford pauses work on $3.5 billion battery plant in Michigan
Ford Motor said Monday it has paused work on a $3.5 billion battery plant in Michigan, citing concerns
2023-09-26 03:16
'Better Call Saul' creators beat Liberty Tax's defamation, trademark lawsuit
By Jonathan Stempel NEW YORK Better call this: Case dismissed. The creators of the hit crime drama "Better
2023-09-26 03:15
ChatGPT can now hear, see and speak as OpenAI gives the chatbot its most humanlike update
You can now speak aloud to ChatGPT and hear the artificial intelligence-powered chatbot talk back.
2023-09-26 02:59
JJ Johnson's recipe for Collard Greens and Rice Soup
Chef JJ Johnson created a soup of collard greens and rice so that he could incorporate some of the most basic ingredients he loves in one pot
2023-09-26 02:58
Canadian union Unifor names GM its second bargaining 'target' among Detroit Three
Canadian union Unifor on Monday announced General Motors as its second bargaining "target" in contract talks with the
2023-09-26 02:55
Chef JJ Johnson's new cookbook celebrates rice, the humble grain that feeds the world
Chef JJ Johnson uses rice at home in many different ways — making crepes with his kids, using leftover rice for his wife’s lunch salad and frying it for dinner multiple ways
2023-09-26 02:53
