Science
Science
The longest cave in the world with a length of 668 kilometers
For friends who like to travel, they should have seen many kinds of natural karst caves or man-made caves, such as Huanglong Cave in Zhangjiajie, Tenglong Cave in Lichuan, Hubei, and Furong Cave in Chongqing. Bizarre, meandering and full of mystery. In fact, the length of their caves is not long, and they can come out in dozens of minutes at most. But the cave we are going to talk about today has a length of 668 kilometers, which is the longest cave in the world.
By witty lukas3 years ago in FYI
Does every bullet turn? If shot in space, reaching the end of the universe or not a dream
If a gun has no bullets, it may be nothing. Modern bullets are generally composed of warheads, propellants, primers, and shells, although the calibers are very different. If you think that bullets are nothing more than that, then I can tell you that it does not have you. As simple as imagined. Among modern bullets, in addition to special bullets, there are also many types of bullets of the same caliber that are conventionally equipped by the military. They look the same at first glance, but in fact have different uses. Only an expert can see the mystery.
By witty lukas3 years ago in FYI
Monkeypox Heart
Monkeypox Heart, as some are referring to it, is acute myocarditis associated with an infection of monkeypox. A 31-year-old male with confirmed monkeypox infection developed acute myocarditis approximately one week following the onset of monkeypox symptoms.
By Paul Conneally3 years ago in FYI
Hip Fracture Treatment Initiative Success
An initiative at to address the way that geriatric patients suffering from a hip fracture are dealt with from the moment they enter hospital to the time they leave and return for their first follow-up is showing good results.
By Paul Conneally3 years ago in FYI
Fat Talks to the Brain
The received wisdom for years has been that the only biofeedback from fat to brain and back was via chemicals, hormones. The body’s adipose tissue, a technical term for fat, produces hormones and these chemical messages move passively in the blood through the body and to the brain which then makes any adjustments to the way the body works accordingly. Now scientists at Scripps Research have discovered that the adipose tissue and the brain are actually connected by sensory neurons and messages are actively sent back and forth between the body’s fat and the brain. Yes, in effect your fat talks to your brain!
By Paul Conneally3 years ago in FYI
Node JS vs PHP: Which one is better for development
PHP and Node js are two of the major backend advancements that power web applications. PHP is more established between the two, so it normally has a bigger community and significant projects in its kitty. All things considered, the PHP community has begun understanding an absence of significant and updated projects. Surprisingly, this is precisely where Node.js is most successful building a strong user base across projects meant for cutting edge use cases.
By Jemin Desai3 years ago in FYI
So, why on earth can't you divide by zero?
Once upon a time, if you asked Siri on your Apple phone, "What does zero divided by zero equal?", it would say. "If you have zero cookies and you want to give them to zero friends, how many can each one get? You see, this question doesn't make any sense, right? The sugar cookie monster will be sad because there are no cookies to eat, and you will be sad because you don't have a single friend."
By Timothy J Carrier3 years ago in FYI











