MI weekly selection #209

This wide field image shows the sky around the very faint neutron star RX J1856.5-3754 in the southern constellation of Corona Australis. This part of the sky also contains interesting regions of dark and bright nebulosity surrounding the variable star R Coronae Australis (upper left), as well as the globular star cluster NGC 6723. The neutron star itself is too faint to be seen here, but lies very close to the centre of the image.
This wide field image shows the sky around the very faint neutron star RX J1856.5-3754 in the southern constellation of Corona Australis. This part of the sky also contains interesting regions of dark and bright nebulosity surrounding the variable star R Coronae Australis (upper left), as well as the globular star cluster NGC 6723. The neutron star itself is too faint to be seen here, but lies very close to the centre of the image.

Vacuum birefringence may have been observed in neutron star

A neutron star seen with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope may have given scientists the first look at a quantum effect predicted back in 1930 but never observed before. “The high linear polarization that we measured with the VLT can’t be easily explained by our models unless the vacuum birefringence effects predicted by QED are included,” said Roberto Mignani, lead author of the study.

Space.com

Tree climbing made human ancestor’s bones strong

Lucy, the 3.18-million-year-old fossil specimen of Australopithecus afarensis, was an avid tree climber, according to a new analysis of her bones. Researchers created 3D digital models of her leg and arm bones to determine her bone strength and compared it to that of chimpanzees and modern humans, finding that her bones were more like those of chimps.

The New York Times

Fossils show evidence of some of the oldest known organisms

Researchers have found 2.52-billion-year-old fossils in South Africa that show evidence of sulphur bacteria before oxygen became abundant. The bacteria are larger than today’s and represent the oldest known organisms that lived in deep water.

UPI

25M-year-old fossil may help explain how baleen whales became toothless

The question of how the toothed ancestors of baleen whales transitioned to the toothless suction style of feeding the creatures use today may be answered with the help of a 25-million-year-old whale fossil. The fossil’s teeth show a kind of wear associated with rapid retraction, a kind of suction similar to drinking something from a straw.

The Christian Science Monitor

Glowing stem cells now available to researchers

The Allen Institute for Cell Science is releasing five lines of skin-derived stem cells whose internal structures are genetically modified to glow for use by researchers. The lines are being made available through the Coriell Institute for Medical Research.

NPR

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