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Moore's Law

Intel is the corporate giant known for manufacturing semiconductors, also called computer chips or integrated circuits (ICs), and its Pentium Processor. But Intel is also known for laying down the law. In 1965, just a few years before he would go on to co-found Intel, Gordon Moore set out an observation that has since become known as 'Moore's Law.' ...

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MooresLaw
Astronomy

Neptune: The Basics

The eighth planet from the Sun, Neptune was the first planet located through mathematical predictions rather than through regular observations of the sky. When Uranus didn't travel exactly as ... Continue reading

NeptuneTheBasics
Mathematics

How To Calculate The Volume Of A Cylinder

Calculating the volume of a cylinder is even easier than calculating its area. All you have to do is recognize that a cylinder is no more than just a bunch of circles stacked to a certain height, just ... Continue reading

VolumeOfACylinder
Astronomy

Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer Solves Mystery of Pulsar 'Speed Limit'

Gravitational radiation, ripples in the fabric of space predicted by Albert Einstein, may serve as a cosmic traffic enforcer, protecting reckless pulsars from spinning too fast and blowing apart, ... Continue reading

RossiXrayTimingExplorer
Chemistry

Ice That Burns

What looks like regular water ice but hisses and jumps around like water on a hot plate when you put it on a room-temperature surface and bursts into flame when you light it up? It is a rare and ... Continue reading

IceThatBurns

Butterflies In Your Brain

ButterfliesInYourBrainThe idea behind chaos theory is that complex systems have an inherent element of unpredictability. The human brain certainly qualifies as a complex system. It is also a chaotic system. It does not behave in completely predictable ways, partly because it is always restructuring itself in response to environmental input. It is a constantly moving target, not unlike the elusive electron of an atom: While one may say with a certain degree of probability where it (brain or electron) might be at a certain time, absolute certainty is impossible. The uncertainty is self-compounding because one is attempting to make predictions about the future state of something whose present state is partly unknowable.

That quality of open-ended plasticity is often said to be one of the human brain's greatest assets, allowing it - and us - to adapt to unlimited environmental challenges. The interactions between neural biology and environment are astoundingly complex and subtle. The brain offers a wealth of examples of what MIT meteorologist Edward Lorenz called the butterfly effect: Just as the insignificant turbulence caused by a butterfly's wing can set in motion a chain of events leading ultimately to a hurricane, a seemingly trivial event early in a brain's development may have long-lasting consequences that may be impossible to predict. But experiments with other animals have revealed some patterns in the complexity. If a young mammal is deprived of its mother's nurture, it will be at high risk of having social problems and anxiety disorders as an adult. On the other hand, the offspring of highly nurturing mothers appear to be genetically protected from the harmful effects of bad early rearing.

But then again, if embryos of genetically high-risk mice are transplanted into the wombs of highly nurturing mothers and then raised by those nurturing mothers, they do not merely grow up to be low in anxiety. They also go on to have offspring that are in turn protected from the harmful effects of maternal deprivation. In a mouse, the right environment in the womb and shortly after birth is sufficient to break the cycle of anxiety disorders. With humans as with mice, the most powerful effects of some genes exert themselves very early in life. A given version of a gene may collude with a given environment to start the brain along a path of development. Even if you were to somehow replace that gene later in the life of the individual, it wouldn't make a difference. The basic structure of the brain will already have been nudged in a certain direction, a fact that can no more be changed than the butterfly can undo the turbulence caused by a flap of his wing the week before.