Who is more humble? The scientist who looks at the universe with an open mind and accepts whatever the universe has to teach us, or somebody who says everything in this book must be considered the literal truth and never mind the fallibility of all the human beings involved?
Carl Sagan
The film “Hidden Figures,” based on the book by Margot Lee Shetterly, focuses on the stories of Katherine Johnson (left, after receiving the Medal of Freedom in 2015), Mary Jackson and Dorothy Vaughan, African-American women who were essential to the success of early spaceflight. Today, NASA embraces their legacy and strives to include everyone who wants to participate in its ongoing exploration. “Progress is driven by questioning our assumptions and cultural assumptions,” NASA Administrator Charles Bolden says in a new video. “Embracing diversity and inclusion is how we as a nation will take the next giant leap in exploration.“
- Source
Let’s learn about today’s black heroes we all can look up to!
TSH levels
Free T4 (fT4) levels
Measurements of total T4 + T3 used to be common however detects both bound and free T3 + T4
Elevated total T4 may occur in healthy individuals if there is an increase in binding protein concentrations
Reliable tests now exist for free T4 + T3
T3 = 3.9-6.7 pmol/L
T4 = 12-22 pmol/L
Thyroid-stimulating hormone
Produced by the pituitary gland, not the thyroid, however:
TSH levels are controlled by negative feedback – can be indication of thyroid function (changes in T3+T4 will result in changes in TSH to try compesate)
TSH levels greatly elevated in hypothyroidism – >10 fold increase over reference values
More sensitive marker than decreased fT4 - increased TSH occurs before fT4 decreases
TSH levels greatly supressed in hyperthyroidism
Low concentrations can also occur in non-thyroidal illness
TSH measurement is the first-line test of thyroid function.
Free T4 + T3 Measurements
Desirable as free hormone is clinically relevant
Total levels can change under conditions that alter thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG) levels e.g. pregnancy
Large changes in TBG may still affect fT4 + fT3 levels
fT3 levels often normal in hypothyroidism
fT3 levels usually raised more than fT4 levels in hyperthyroidism
Unless complicated by an illness effecting conversion of T4 to T3
Therefore: – fT4 levels are a better indication of hypothyroidism
fT3 levels are a better indication of hyperthyroidism
Alternate realities, parallel dimensions, and multiple universes. Whatever you call it, the notion of other versions of existence is one of the most popular tropes in science fiction. In some other universe, you’re not reading this sentence but skydiving. In another, you’re nothing but a cockroach. In yet another, not only is life impossible, but atoms don’t even exist.
In recent years, though, such seemingly crazy ideas have shifted from fantasy and speculation toward bona fide science. Even among physicists, the multiverse has gone mainstream.
Theoretically, infinite universes might stretch beyond our own, like endless bubbles in a sea of boiling water. Each bubble has its own laws of physics, and although we may never visit or even see another bubble, some physicists say growing evidence is making the multiverse increasingly plausible—and even probable. Learn more here.
It’s a tremendous Trilobite Tuesday!
When most of us think about trilobites, we imagine rather small creatures that inhabited the ancient seas. Indeed, most members of the more than 25,000 scientifically recognized trilobite species were less that three inches in length. Occasionally, however, paleontologists encounter a megafauna where, due to a variety of circumstances, the trilobite species were huge. One of these megafaunas can be found near the small Portuguese town of Arouca where the 450 million year-old Valongo formation produces prodigious numbers of exceptionally large Ordovician-age trilobites, such as this 41 cm Hungioides bohemicus. Other trilobite magafaunas appear sporadically around the globe, including Cambrian locations in Morocco and Devonian outcrops in Nevada.
Meet many more trilobites on the Museum website.
The seventh row of the Periodic Table of Elements is now complete, rendering all textbooks out of date. The discovered elements don’t have permanent names yet, but their atomic numbers are 113, 115, 117 and 118.
Livermore Lab scientists and international collaborators have officially discovered three of the four new elements: 115, 117 and 118. The illustration above is of 117, tentatively named ununseptium or Uus.
The new elements’ existence was confirmed by further experiments that reproduced them — however briefly. Element 113, for instance, exists for less than a thousandth of a second.
Learn more about the new elements
Separation of a highly fluorescent anthranilic acid derivative from the reaction mixture.
The upper organic layer dissolved almost completely my compound from the reaction mixture and could be separated in one step. A good point was that the compound had a really strong fluorescence and if I placed an UV lamp next to the separation funnel it was easily observed that the water phase contained almost none of the title compound.
Scientists have uncovered the first evidence that the human ovary may be able to grow new eggs in adulthood.
If confirmed, the discovery would overturn the accepted view that women are born with a fixed number of eggs and that the body has no capacity to increase this supply. Until now this has been the main constraint on the female reproductive lifespan. The findings, if replicated, would raise the prospect of new treatments to allow older women to conceive and for infertility problems in younger women.
The small study, involving cancer patients, showed that ovarian biopsies taken from young women who had been given a chemotherapy drug had a far higher density of eggs than healthy women of the same age.
Prof Evelyn Telfer, who led the work at the University of Edinburgh, said: “This was something remarkable and completely unexpected for us. The tissue appeared to have formed new eggs. The dogma is that the human ovary has a fixed population of eggs and that no new eggs form throughout life.”
Ovarian biopsies taken from young women who had been given a particular chemotherapy drug showed that the tissue appeared to have formed new eggs. Photograph: Science Picture Co/Getty Images/Science Faction
With the simplest assumptions, you end up with eternal inflation and the multiverse. Being conservative on that front lands you at this radical thing.
Physicist Andreas Albrecht of the University of California, Davis. The idea of a multiverse might not be as crazy as it sounds. (via sciencefriday)
Birch reduction in ethylamine as a solvent.
Birch reduction is a really special thing in organic chemistry, it’s a dissolving metal reduction, that uses alkali metals, most often lithium or sodium and in most cases liquid ammonia as a solvent.
Liquid ammonia is a quite nasty thing, it boils at -33.34 °C, and has a really bad odor, so dry ice based cooling mixtures should be used for these reactions. However, in some cases, other amines, like ethylamine could be used instead of the liquid ammonia, and in this case normal ice based cooling mixtures are also good, since ethylamine boils at ~20 °C.
The mechanism of the Birch reduction has been the subject of much discussion, but it involves radical steps and solvated electrons that could result the deep color as seen on the above picture/gifs.
For more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch_reduction
A pharmacist and a little science sideblog. "Knowledge belongs to humanity, and is the torch which illuminates the world." - Louis Pasteur
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