January 21, 2025
3 Pain read
Mysterious blob, green monsters and space garbage crisis
Our February issue includes New Alzheimer’s guidelines, transcendent teenage thinking, Neanderthal DNA and more

American scientificFebruary 2025
Do you remember learning school diagrams in high school biology? Cell wall, organs, nucleus. The image is very complicated and interesting, than he taught us. The cells are full of adolescents, full of phase change, in the phase of protein and RNA, and in recent years they have taken cell biology. In our superficial story, the science writer has entered the Philip ball The world of these areas, known as biomolecular condensations that make amazing roles that work in all life domains. When awry go, the researchers suspect that protein behind some neurodegenerative diseases can cause prawns. Scientists can take advantage of how to mark the blobs, what shape, and how they can be made for medical advances.
Teenagers are forever to make sense of world and find it. This effort needs flexible changes between two different brain circuits, one immediately, focused on thinking and the other for reflection reflection. Mary Helen-Yang describes Mary Helen Neuroscientist How to make a transcendent thinking and depth teen leads to brain development and life satisfaction. Good news: Parents and teachers can give teenagers to travel in time to travel in time, build great questions and narratives, and brighter young results are brighter future.
The medical area is defining Alzheimer’s disease. Until recently, doctors evaluated the disease mainly using subjectivitive cognitive tests. Now, genetic advisers Laura Hercher explained, blood tests that account for biomarkers can indicate someone The symptom has the pathology before creating. Advances encouraged scientists to discuss someone with only biomarkers and is not symptoms to be diagnosed of Alzheimer’s. The answer has knot implications, Hercher pointed out: “would you go to a surgeon or would you rent a lawyer who was a positive biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease?” Flip compared to what happens if the field advances in the prevention point? Then the doctor could be able to treat a person with “pre-Alzheimer’s”. As my mother suffers through the central stage Alzheimer’s, I am watching all progress in preventing and treatment of future diseases.
To help Science Journalism
If you enjoy this article, consider entering award-winning journalism Subscribe. By purchasing subscription, you are helping to ensure the future of stories about the discoveries and ideas that are conformed to today.
James Webb Space Telescope continues to give a wonderful view of our universe. Elderly space and physics editor Clara Moskowitz Jwst walks us on a newest photo cache: The carnival of a nearby supernova footprint, Cassiopeia A. The images that images are a more detailed look at the gas and dust that remain against the gas and dust that remains at the time. You will see the bright pink layers of material, orange and red from the star who dies, as well as the jewelry bubbles also named “green monster”.
Requires great climate emergency ideas. Author Douglas Fox It is called improved rock meteorization excavatedIt involves expanding the grated rock that crosses the farm field, carbon dioxide from the air (and to increase crop performance). Random should be a mountain mining, however, that releases his glue2.
Moriba Jah Space warns The amount of space garbage that orbiting our planet rises quicklyAnd if we don’t play soon, space can’t be used, we’ve come to trust computer technology. The answer, Jah says, is the establishment of “Circular Economy” that encourages “reduced, reuse and recycled”.
2010 scientists know early Homo sapiens Interbred with Neanderthals, and most people still lead to genetic fingerprints from this intermixing. Emily L. Casanova and F. Alex Genetic Neuroscientist indicates the accumulative research accumulator Neandertal DNA is not quiet to sit in our genomesThe foam; It also affects some brain structures as well as certain neurodeopmentational and psychological conditions. Reading this issue We encourage you to spread your mind and explore the unknown.