Artificial intelligence to generate new cancer drugs on demand0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- December 28, 2016
Towards the cornucopia of meaningful leads: applying deep adversarial autoencoders for new molecule development in oncology
Towards the cornucopia of meaningful leads: applying deep adversarial autoencoders for new molecule development in oncology
A tiny organism at the base of the food chain, but vital for life to exist on Earth, is under threat, according to data collected by a NASA satellite that has been firing a laser into the ocean for a decade.
In the new year, there are companies making apps that will bring augmented reality to become easily accessible to everyone
Repeated wave blasts suggest nondestructive event as source
A star with a strange composition has been spotted and astronomers think that it has just eaten an exoplanetary lunch.
Google Lunar X-Prize contestant Team HAKUTO has a promising rover that will be launched to the moon in the new year.
Days before Christmas, a research scientist at an Ontario university has created a microscopic figure he’s calling the world’s “smallest snowman.”
Researchers have discovered that tantalum carbide and hafnium carbide materials can withstand scorching temperatures of nearly 4000 degrees Celsius.
The newest robots to pave the way for synthetic creatures is able to move remarkably well like a manta ray.
A couple of scientists have considered how the search for extraterrestrial intelligence is conducted and, working off the idea that sufficiently advanced alien beings would at least attempt to build defensive structures around their world to defend against potentially catastrophic extraplanetary threats, suggest that one way such beings might be found would be through their defense systems. In fact, the scientists contend, the aliens would not necessarily have to be much more advanced than humans.
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