Category: 7. Science

  • A bionic knee integrated into tissue can restore natural movement | MIT News

    A bionic knee integrated into tissue can restore natural movement | MIT News

    MIT researchers have developed a new bionic knee that can help people with above-the-knee amputations walk faster, climb stairs, and avoid obstacles more easily than they could with a traditional prosthesis.

    Unlike prostheses in which the residual limb sits within a socket, the new system is directly integrated with the user’s muscle and bone tissue. This enables greater stability and gives the user much more control over the movement of the prosthesis.

    Participants in a small clinical study also reported that the limb felt more like a part of their own body, compared to people who had more traditional above-the-knee amputations.

    “A prosthesis that’s tissue-integrated — anchored to the bone and directly controlled by the nervous system — is not merely a lifeless, separate device, but rather a system that is carefully integrated into human physiology, offering a greater level of prosthetic embodiment. It’s not simply a tool that the human employs, but rather an integral part of self,” says Hugh Herr, a professor of media arts and sciences, co-director of the K. Lisa Yang Center for Bionics at MIT, an associate member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, and the senior author of the new study.

    Tony Shu PhD ’24 is the lead author of the paper, which appears today in Science.

    Better control

    Over the past several years, Herr’s lab has been working on new prostheses that can extract neural information from muscles left behind after an amputation and use that information to help guide a prosthetic limb.

    During a traditional amputation, pairs of muscles that take turns stretching and contracting are usually severed, disrupting the normal agonist-antagonist relationship of the muscles. This disruption makes it very difficult for the nervous system to sense the position of a muscle and how fast it’s contracting.

    Using the new surgical approach developed by Herr and his colleagues, known as agonist-antagonist myoneuronal interface (AMI), muscle pairs are reconnected during surgery so that they still dynamically communicate with each other within the residual limb. This sensory feedback helps the wearer of the prosthesis to decide how to move the limb, and also generates electrical signals that can be used to control the prosthetic limb.

    In a 2024 study, the researchers showed that people with amputations below the knee who received the AMI surgery were able to walk faster and navigate around obstacles much more naturally than people with traditional below-the-knee amputations.

    In the new study, the researchers extended the approach to better serve people with amputations above the knee. They wanted to create a system that could not only read out signals from the muscles using AMI but also be integrated into the bone, offering more stability and better sensory feedback.

    To achieve that, the researchers developed a procedure to insert a titanium rod into the residual femur bone at the amputation site. This implant allows for better mechanical control and load bearing than a traditional prosthesis. Additionally, the implant contains 16 wires that collect information from electrodes located on the AMI muscles inside the body, which enables more accurate transduction of the signals coming from the muscles.

    This bone-integrated system, known as e-OPRA, transmits AMI signals to a new robotic controller developed specifically for this study. The controller uses this information to calculate the torque necessary to move the prosthesis the way that the user wants it to move.

    “All parts work together to better get information into and out of the body and better interface mechanically with the device,” Shu says. “We’re directly loading the skeleton, which is the part of the body that’s supposed to be loaded, as opposed to using sockets, which is uncomfortable and can lead to frequent skin infections.”

    In this study, two subjects received the combined AMI and e-OPRA system, known as an osseointegrated mechanoneural prosthesis (OMP). These users were compared with eight who had the AMI surgery but not the e-OPRA implant, and seven users who had neither AMI nor e-OPRA. All subjects took a turn at using an experimental powered knee prosthesis developed by the lab.

    The researchers measured the participants’ ability to perform several types of tasks, including bending the knee to a specified angle, climbing stairs, and stepping over obstacles. In most of these tasks, users with the OMP system performed better than the subjects who had the AMI surgery but not the e-OPRA implant, and much better than users of traditional prostheses.

    “This paper represents the fulfillment of a vision that the scientific community has had for a long time — the implementation and demonstration of a fully physiologically integrated, volitionally controlled robotic leg,” says Michael Goldfarb, a professor of mechanical engineering and director of the Center for Intelligent Mechatronics at Vanderbilt University, who was not involved in the research. “This is really difficult work, and the authors deserve tremendous credit for their efforts in realizing such a challenging goal.”

    A sense of embodiment

    In addition to testing gait and other movements, the researchers also asked questions designed to evaluate participants’ sense of embodiment — that is, to what extent their prosthetic limb felt like a part of their own body.

    Questions included whether the patients felt as if they had two legs, if they felt as if the prosthesis was part of their body, and if they felt in control of the prosthesis. Each question was designed to evaluate the participants’ feelings of agency, ownership of device, and body representation.

    The researchers found that as the study went on, the two participants with the OMP showed much greater increases in their feelings of agency and ownership than the other subjects.

    “Another reason this paper is significant is that it looks into these embodiment questions and it shows large improvements in that sensation of embodiment,” Herr says. “No matter how sophisticated you make the AI systems of a robotic prosthesis, it’s still going to feel like a tool to the user, like an external device. But with this tissue-integrated approach, when you ask the human user what is their body, the more it’s integrated, the more they’re going to say the prosthesis is actually part of self.”

    The AMI procedure is now done routinely on patients with below-the-knee amputations at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Herr expects it will soon become the standard for above-the-knee amputations as well. The combined OMP system will need larger clinical trials to receive FDA approval for commercial use, which Herr expects may take about five years.

    The research was funded by the Yang Tan Collective and DARPA.

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  • Rivers choose their path based on erosion — a discovery that could transform flood planning and restoration

    Rivers choose their path based on erosion — a discovery that could transform flood planning and restoration

    Two types of rivers

    Earth scientists have long divided rivers into single and multi-channel categories, and generally investigate the two separately. While neither type clearly outnumbers the other, most of the world’s largest rivers are multi-channeled. The notable exception is the single-channel Mississippi River, in the United States, where a lot of river research has occurred.

    Most field research has focused on single-threaded rivers, partly because they’re simpler. Meanwhile, experimental work has focused on multi-threaded rivers due to the challenges of recreating single-threaded channels in laboratory tank experiments.

    It was while working on one of these tank experiments at University of Minnesota’s St. Anthony Falls Laboratory that Chadwick got the inspiration for this study. While examining multi-channel rivers in the lab, he noticed that they were constantly widening and splitting. “I was banging my head on the wall because I kept measuring more erosion than deposition. And that was not what we’re taught in school,” he recalled. “That led me to read some old books from the Army Corps and other sources about examples where there’s more bank erosion than deposition.” Eventually, he became curious whether this occurred in nature.

    It was a classic example of the scientific method: “You generate a hypothesis in a laboratory setting and then you’re able to test it in nature,” said co-author Evan Greenberg, a former doctoral student at UCSB who received the prestigious Lancaster Award for best dissertation.

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  • Record-Breaking Martian Meteorite Could Fetch $4 Million at Sotheby’s

    Record-Breaking Martian Meteorite Could Fetch $4 Million at Sotheby’s

    A 54-pound chunk of Mars—believed to be the largest Martian meteorite ever discovered on Earth—is hitting the auction block at Sotheby’s New York on July 16, with an estimate of $2 million to $4 million.

    Dubbed NWA 16788, the rock was discovered in November 2023 in Niger’s Agadez region and accounts for an astonishing 6.5 percent of all known Martian material on Earth. It’s also 70 percent larger than the next largest piece of Mars found on our planet. Sotheby’s is billing it as the most valuable meteorite ever offered at auction.

    Related Articles

    According to Cassandra Hatton, Sotheby’s vice chairman of science and natural history, “NWA 16788 is a discovery of extraordinary significance,” a “once-in-a-generation find” that connects us to “our celestial neighbor that has long captured the human imagination.”

    Blasted from Mars by an ancient asteroid impact and likely torpedoed to Earth, the specimen features visible areas of “glassy fusion crust,” proof of its searing descent through the atmosphere. According to Smithsonian Magazine, its mineral structure suggests part of it was transformed into maskelynite, a type of glass formed under extreme pressure and heat.

    Sotheby’s said that meteorites are rarer than diamonds, and that Martian meteorites are exceptionally scarce—only around 400 have ever been identified, most of them consisting of small fragments. Sotheby’s also notes that North America averages just 15 meteorite discoveries annually.

    The meteorite will be on view at Sotheby’s from July 8–15 before the live auction on July 16. 

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  • New Species of Multituberculate Mammal Discovered in UK

    New Species of Multituberculate Mammal Discovered in UK

    Paleontologists have discovered the fossilized dental remains from a new genus and species of plagiaulacid multituberculate in the Lower Cretaceous Lulworth Formation of the Purbeck Group, Dorset, United Kingdom.

    An artist’s restoration of Novaculadon mirabilis. Image credit: Hamzah Imran.

    Multituberculates are a highly successful and the most diverse group of Mesozoic mammals.

    Over 200 species are known to science, ranging from mouse-sized to beaver-sized creatures.

    These mammals existed from the Middle Jurassic throughout the Mesozoic and persisted past the end-Cretaceous extinction surviving until the early Oligocene.

    They occupied various ecological niches, from burrow-dwelling to squirrel-like tree climbers.

    The newly-discovered species roamed our planet during the Berriasian age of the Early Cretaceous epoch, around 143 million years ago.

    Dubbed Novaculadon mirabilis, this mammal was omnivorous, likely feeding on small invertebrates such as worms and insects.

    Its sharp-pointed incisors and ridged, blade-like premolars indicate a feeding strategy distinct from modern rodents like squirrels and rats.

    “This research demonstrates how early mammals carved out ecological niches while dinosaurs dominated the landscape,” said University of Portsmouth Emeritus Professor David Martill and his colleagues.

    The 1.65-cm-long jaw of Novaculadon mirabilis was found by University of Portsmouth undergraduate student Benjamin Weston in 2024.

    “The fossil is characterized by a long pointed incisor at the front, followed by a gap and then four razor-sharp premolars,” the paleontologists said.

    “While superficially resembling a rabbit’s jaw, the pointed incisors and distinctive premolars identify it as belonging to the multituberculate group.”

    The specimen came from a locality on the upper part of the beach in Durlston Bay, Dorset, United Kingdom.

    This locality belongs to the Lower Cretaceous Lulworth Formation of the Purbeck Group.

    “The new specimen is the most complete multituberculate material yet recovered from the Purbeck Group,” the researchers said.

    “The fossil was obtained from a highly distinctive horizon within the Cherty Freshwater Beds, the so-called Flint Bed, which scientists considered to represent deposition in a freshwater lagoon.”

    Novaculadon mirabilis is also the first mammal to be recovered from the Flint Bed,” they added.

    The discovery of Novaculadon mirabilis is described in a paper in the Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association.

    _____

    Benjamin T. Weston et al. A new multituberculate (Mammalia, Allotheria) from the Lulworth Formation (Cretaceous, Berriasian) of Dorset, England. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, published online July 9, 2025; doi: 10.1016/j.pgeola.2025.101128

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  • Illuminated sugars show how microbes eat the ocean’s carbon

    Illuminated sugars show how microbes eat the ocean’s carbon

    image: 

    Depiction of the diatom Conticribra weissflogii (red) and the sugar polymer structures it secretes (blue). 


    view more 

    Credit: Marlene Reich, 2024

    A team of chemists, microbiologists and ecologists designed a molecular probe (a molecule designed to detect e.g. proteins or DNA inside an organism) that lights up when a sugar is consumed. In the journal JACS they now describe how the probe helps studying the microscopic tug-of-war between algae and microbial degraders in the ocean.

    “Sugars are ubiquitous in marine ecosystems, yet it’s still unclear whether or how microbes can degrade them all,” says Jan-Hendrik Hehemann from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology and the MARUM – Center for Marine Environmental Sciences, both located in Bremen. “The new probe allows us to watch it happen live”, Peter Seeberger from the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces adds.

    Sugars capture carbon

    Algae capture carbon dioxide and convert it into oxygen and organic matter. Sugars are a key part of this. However, not all sugars are easily broken down. Some are so complex that most microbes struggle to digest them. This allows carbon to sink to the ocean floor, where it stays for centuries until the right enzymes come along. Identifying which microbes digest which sugars has been a long-standing challenge, especially in complex microbiomes.

    Lighting up sugar breakdown

    To address this issue, the team employed automated glycan assembly to create a sugar labelled with two fluorescent dyes. These dyes interact via a process called Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET). Together, they function like a molecular switch. When the probe is intact, it remains dark. However, as soon as an enzyme breaks the sugar’s backbone, the probe lights up. Thus, the researchers can see where and when the sugar is degraded. In their experiments, the team tracked α-mannan turnover, a polysaccharide (long sugar chain) found in algal blooms. The glycan probe worked in purified enzymes, bacterial cell lysates, live cultures and even microbial communities.

    “This research is a wonderful example of interdisciplinary collaboration between Max Planck Institutes. With our FRET glycans, we now have a new tool for researching phytoplankton-bacterioplankton interactions in the ocean”, says Rudolf Amann from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology.

    Revealing hidden degraders 

    By enabling the tracking of α-mannan turnover, this glycan probe opens up new avenues for studying microbial metabolism without the need for prior genomic knowledge. Researchers can now pinpoint active degraders in situ, map the progression of glycan breakdown through space and time, and quantify turnover rates in complex communities. This tool paves the way for deeper insights into glycan cycling across ecosystems, from ocean algal blooms to the human gut. By observing which microbes are activated and under what conditions, scientists can link specific enzymatic activities to environmental processes and ultimately gain a better understanding of carbon flux in the ocean.

    “Sugars are central to the marine carbon cycle,” concludes first author Conor Crawford from the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces. “With this FRET probe, we can ask: Who’s eating what, where, and when?”


    Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

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  • Meet Mineral Mappers Flying NASA Tech Out West

    Meet Mineral Mappers Flying NASA Tech Out West

    NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey have been mapping the planets since Apollo. One team is searching closer to home for minerals critical to national security and the economy.

    If not for the Joshua trees, the tan hills of Cuprite, Nevada, would resemble Mars. Scalded and chemically altered by water from deep underground, the rocks here are earthly analogs for understanding ancient Martian geology. The hills are also rich with minerals. They’ve lured prospectors for more than 100 years and made Cuprite an ideal place to test NASA technology designed to map the minerals, craters, crusts, and ices of our solar system.

    Sensors that discovered lunar water, charted Saturn’s moons, even investigated ground zero in New York City were all tested and calibrated at Cuprite, said Robert Green, a senior research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. He’s honed instruments in Nevada for decades.

    One of Green’s latest projects is to find and map rocky surfaces in the American West that could contain minerals crucial to the nation’s economy and security. Currently, the U.S. is dependent on imports of 50 critical minerals, which include lithium and rare earth elements used in everything from rechargeable batteries to medicine.

    Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) are searching nationwide for domestic sources. NASA is contributing to this effort with high-altitude aircraft and sensors capable of detecting the molecular fingerprints of minerals across vast, treeless expanses in wavelengths of light not visible to human eyes.

    The collaboration is called GEMx, the Geological Earth Mapping Experiment, and it’s likely the largest airborne spectroscopic survey in U.S. history. Since 2023, scientists working on GEMx have charted more than 190,000 square miles (500,000 square kilometers) of North American soil.

    As NASA instruments fly in aircraft 60,000 feet (18,000 meters) overhead, Todd Hoefen, a geophysicist, and his colleagues from USGS work below. The samples of rock they test and collect in the field are crucial to ensuring that the airborne observations match reality on the ground and are not skewed by the intervening atmosphere.

    The GEMx mission marks the latest in a long history of partnerships between NASA and USGS. The two agencies have worked together to map rocky worlds — and keep astronauts and rovers safe — since the early days of the space race.

    For example, geologic maps of the Moon made in the early 1960s at the USGS Astrogeology Science Center in Flagstaff, Arizona, helped Apollo mission planners select safe and scientifically promising sites for the six crewed landings that occurred from 1969 to 1972. Before stepping onto the lunar surface, NASA’s Moon-bound astronauts traveled to Flagstaff to practice fieldwork with USGS geologists. A version of those Apollo boot camps continues today with astronauts and scientists involved in NASA’s Artemis mission.

    To detect minerals and other compounds on the surfaces of rocky bodies across the solar system, including Earth, scientists use a technology pioneered by JPL in the 1980s called imaging spectroscopy. One of the original imaging spectrometers built by Robert Green and his team is central to the GEMx campaign in the Western U.S.

    About the size and weight of a minifridge and built to fly on planes, the instrument is called AVIRIS-Classic, short for Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer. Like all imaging spectrometers, it takes advantage of the fact that every molecule reflects and absorbs light in a unique pattern, like a fingerprint. Spectrometers detect these molecular fingerprints in the light bouncing off or emitted from a sample or a surface.  

    In the case of GEMx, that’s sunlight shimmering off different kinds of rocks.  

    Compared to a standard digital camera, which “sees” three color channels (red, green, and blue), imaging spectrometers can see more than 200 channels, including infrared wavelengths of light that are invisible to the human eye.

    NASA spectrometers have orbited or flown by every major rocky body in our solar system. They’ve helped scientists investigate methane lakes on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, and study Pluto’s thin atmosphere. One JPL-built spectrometer is currently en route to Europa, an icy moon of Jupiter, to help search for chemical ingredients necessary to support life.

    “One of the cool things about NASA is that we develop technology to look out at the solar system and beyond, but we also turn around and look back down,” said Ben Phillips, a longtime NASA program manager who led GEMx until he retired in 2025.

    More than 200 hours of GEMx flights are scheduled through fall 2025. Scientists will process and validate the data, with the first USGS mineral maps to follow. During these flights, an ER-2 research aircraft from NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, will cruise over the Western U.S. at altitudes twice as high as a passenger jet flies.

    At such high altitudes, pilot Dean Neeley must wear a spacesuit similar to those used by astronauts. He flies solo in the cramped cockpit but will be accompanied by state-of-the-art NASA instruments. In the belly of the plane rides AVIRIS-Classic, which will be retiring soon after more than three decades in service. Carefully packed in the plane’s nose is its successor: AVIRIS-5, taking flight for the first time in 2025.

    Together, the two instruments provide 10 times the performance of the older spectrometer alone, but even by itself AVIRIS-5 marks a leap forward. It can sample areas ranging from about 30 feet (10 meters) to less than a foot (30 centimeters).

    “The newest generation of AVIRIS will more than live up to the original,” Green said.

    The GEMx research project will last four years and is funded by the USGS Earth Mapping Resources Initiative. The initiative will capitalize on both the technology developed by NASA for spectroscopic imaging, as well as the agency’s expertise in analyzing the datasets and extracting critical mineral information from them.

    Data collected by GEMx is available here.

    Andrew Wang / Jane J. Lee
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
    626-379-6874 / 818-354-0307
    andrew.wang@jpl.nasa.gov / jane.j.lee@jpl.nasa.gov

    Karen Fox / Elizabeth Vlock
    NASA Headquarters, Washington
    202-358-1600
    karen.c.fox@nasa.gov / elizabeth.a.vlock@nasa.gov

    Written by Sally Younger

    2025-086

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  • Guy In Parking Lot Sees Something Stuck Behind Car Grille — Then It Moves

    Guy In Parking Lot Sees Something Stuck Behind Car Grille — Then It Moves

    A man was walking through the parking lot of a shopping center in Australia when he noticed something odd. There appeared to be something stuck behind the grille of a nearby car — and then he realized it was moving.

    WIRES

    The Good Samaritan immediately contacted WIRES, then grabbed a tarp and an umbrella to try and shield the little animal from the sun while he waited for the rescuers to arrive. As the team assessed the situation, the owner of the car returned — and couldn’t believe there was a wallaby stuck inside her car.

    car in parking lotcar in parking lot
    WIRES

    “We believe the wallaby was probably crossing the road at high speed and went under the car and was flipped up behind the grille,” John Grant, a media spokesperson for WIRES, told The Dodo. “The vehicle owner didn’t even realise she had hit anything, so was shocked when she arrived back to her car to find the poor animal trapped behind the grille. She had driven from nearby, so it had been there for less than 45 minutes.”

    wallaby stuck in carwallaby stuck in car
    WIRES

    WIRES volunteer Mark Badger determined that it was too dangerous to try and remove the wallaby, later named Arnie, himself as the animals are prone to extreme stress that can lead to complications. Instead, he contacted Byron Bay Wildlife Hospital, and Dr. Brie Talbot arrived on the scene to sedate Arnie.

    Once he was sedated, the team was able to safely remove Arnie from behind the car grille. After checking him over, Dr. Talbot was shocked to discover the little wallaby somehow had no injuries from his ordeal.

    “He was nicknamed Arnie after Arnold Schwarzenegger due to his amazing ability and strength in surviving such a traumatic event unscathed,” Grant said.

    wallabywallaby
    WIRES

    Arnie was placed into the care of another WIRES volunteer, and within a day, he was eating and drinking normally and seemed to be feeling just fine. He was kept under observation for a few weeks to make sure he was completely OK, then he was released back into the wild, where he belonged.

    “Like nearly all rescues, he bounded off without a backward glance, which is always celebrated as a successful outcome by every wildlife volunteer,” Grant said.

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  • James Webb Space Telescope unwraps the dusty shrouds of dying stars

    James Webb Space Telescope unwraps the dusty shrouds of dying stars

    Astronomers have used the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to study the dusty shrouds that envelope dying stars.

    The investigation could help reveal where vast amounts of cosmic dust come from before they go on to form the building blocks of new stars.

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  • Researchers claim Earth, Milky Way are trapped in cosmic void

    Researchers claim Earth, Milky Way are trapped in cosmic void

    July 10 (UPI) — Fresh evidence claims that the Earth and the surrounding galaxy are suspended inside a cosmic void based on echoes from the Big Bang.

    Research presented at the Royal Astronomical Society National Astronomy Meeting on Wednesday showed that data found by analyzing the sounds from the Big Bang, known as “baryon acoustic oscillations,” suggest that the Milky Way Galaxy is floating in a region that is less dense than average.

    The 2 billion light-year region that scientists have dubbed the “Hubble Bubble” is 20% less dense than the average matter density throughout the universe.

    If proven correct, the findings can help settle an issue known as the “Hubble Tension” created by conflicting measurements of the expansion of the universe and could help reveal its true age.

    The first measurement is based on small changes in the cosmic microwave background, which is “cosmic fossils” of the first light produced by the universe 380,000 years after the Big Bang, while the second measures distances between type la supernovas or variable stars and their host galaxies.

    The first method found the universe expanded at a rate of 67 kilometers per second per megaparsec, while the second found a higher rate of 73.2 kilometers per second per megaparsec.

    The study posits, however, that if the Milky Way is sitting in a “Hubble Bubble”, it would be expanding faster than a higher-density cosmos.

    “A potential solution to this inconsistency is that our Galaxy is close to the center of a large, local void,” the study’s lead author, Indranil Banik, said in a statement. “It would cause matter to be pulled by gravity towards the higher density exterior of the void, leading to the void becoming emptier with time.”

    That would make local expansion inside the void faster than it is in denser, more distant regions of the cosmos, he added.

    The local void theory would mean the Earth would have to sit about in the center of the low-density “Hubble Bubble.”

    Banik and his team used the sounds of the Big Bang to bolster previous research from the 1990s, which found fewer galaxies in the local universe than previously believed.

    “These sound waves traveled for only a short while before becoming frozen in place once the universe cooled enough for neutral atoms to form,” Banik explained. “They act as a standard ruler, whose angular size we can use to chart the cosmic expansion history.”

    The researchers found that it is 100 times more likely that we live in a cosmic void than a region of average density.

    Banik and his team’s next step will be to compare their void model to other models to reconstruct the universe’s expansion history. They will also explore tweaks to the standard model of cosmology.

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  • Lens cleaning set the price of two cups of coffee — Prime Day bargain!

    Lens cleaning set the price of two cups of coffee — Prime Day bargain!

    I’m sure there are photographers out there who have resorted to wiping their lens clean with their t-shirt. It’s not the most glamorous way to keep your gear clean. Luckily for you, there are some good deals on camera accessories this Amazon Prime Day and who can grumble at a lens cleaning kit costing less than $10?

    You might be getting your gear ready for the full moon, known as the buck moon, that is rising tonight (July 10) or preparing for a night of astrophotography for the return of Saturn to the night sky. Either way, you may want to consider adding a lens cleaning kit to your gear to ensure your kit is always ready to grab and go.

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