Long-awaited ape genomes give new insights into their evolution — and ours
Episode description
Researchers have sequenced the complete genomes of six ape species, helping uncover the evolutionary history of our closest relatives and offering insights into what makes humans human. The genomes of chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, Bornean orangutan, Sumatran orangutan and siamang have been sequenced end-to-end, filling in gaps that have long eluded researchers.
Research Article: Yoo et al.
News and Views: Complete ape genomes offer a close-up view of human evolution
News: What makes us human? Milestone ape genomes promise clues
How sunflower stars are evading a mysterious epidemic, and how solar panels made of moon dust could power lunar bases.
Research Highlight: Revealed: where rare and giant starfish hide from an enigmatic killer
Research Highlight: Solar cells made of Moon dust could power up a lunar base
After decades of research, physicists have demonstrated that, in principle, an alternative kind of particle accelerator can work just as well as more conventional designs. Many particle accelerators that power huge experiments like the Large Hadron Collider at CERN are radio-frequency accelerators, but they are large and limited in how strong their magnetic fields can be. The new work shows that accelerators that instead use plasma to accelerate particles could be a viable alternative and could be built at much smaller scales.
Research article: Winkler et al.
A drug that makes blood poisonous to mosquitoes, and how an AI worked out how to solve key challenges in Minecraft by ‘imagining’ solutions.
Science Alert: Drug For Rare Disease Turns Human Blood Into Mosquito Poison
Nature: AI masters Minecraft: DeepMind program finds diamonds without being taught
Vote for How whales sing without drowning, an anatomical mystery solved
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