The Surprising Physics of Pulling a Bike With a Rubber Band

If I pull forward on a bike at the bottom of the front wheel, which way will it move? Can you use physics to justify your answer?
The post The Surprising Physics of Pulling a Bike With a Rubber Band appeared first on WIRED.
The lies we tell are more convincing when we need to pee
Indonesia forced to act as wildfire haze chokes South-East Asia
Zoologger: Octopus makes own quicksand to build burrow on seabed
This Cloaking Device Is Less Harry Potter, More Predator

Every time a new advance in metamaterials cloaking comes along, you read about how science is creating Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak. It’s not.
The post This Cloaking Device Is Less Harry Potter, More Predator appeared first on WIRED.
Absurd Creature of the Week: This Tiny Adorable Critter Is Half Kangaroo, Half Velociraptor

The achingly adorable jerboas frantically hop around like kangaroos on amphetamines.
The post Absurd Creature of the Week: This Tiny Adorable Critter Is Half Kangaroo, Half Velociraptor appeared first on WIRED.
Citizen scientists catch cloud of comets orbiting distant star
First application to pursue genome editing research in human embryos

Human embryos are at the center of a debate over the ethics of gene editing (credit: Dr. Yorgos Nikas/SPL)
The first application to pursue CRISPR/Cas9 genome-editing research in viable human embryos has been submitted to the UK’s fertility regulator by a team of researchers affiliated with the Francis Crick Institute in London.
“This research proposal is a troubling and provocative move,” commented Marcy Darnovsky, PhD, Executive Director of the Center for Genetics and Society.
“Modifying the genes of human embryos is deeply controversial because it can be used for worthwhile research on the one hand, or to produce genetically modified human beings on the other. A global public conversation about preventing such misuses is just getting underway, and this proposal could short-circuit those deliberations.
“It’s illegal in the UK and dozens of other countries to use a modified embryo to initiate a pregnancy, but in others — notably the U.S. — we don’t have that legal protection,” Darnovsky added. “If scientists and the regulatory agency in the UK are serious about responsible use of powerful new gene altering technologies, they won’t be rushing ahead in ways that could open the door to a world of genetically modified humans.”
If the UK Human Fertilisation & Embryology Authority were to issue this license, this would be the first approval of genome editing research on the human germline by a national regulatory body.
The resulting experiments would be the second of their kind in this highly controversial area of research. In April, scientists working out of China published research that they had created the first genetically modified human embryos—these embryos were nonviable, and the results of the CRISPR/Cas9 engineering were highly unsuccessful: producing off target mutations and mosaicism that underlined the limitations of our current understandings of genetics and genomics.
The response from the scientific community and the public after the first human embryo gene editing experiment in April was swift. Many scientists voiced support for either a pause or a moratorium on human germline modification.
On September 14, the National Academies announced that the International Summit on Human Gene Editing scheduled for December will now be co-hosted by the Royal Society (UK) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Minority Report, Limitless TV shows launch Monday, Tuesday
A sequel to Steven Spielberg’s epic movie, MINORITY REPORT is set in Washington, D.C., 10 years after the demise of Precrime, a law enforcement agency tasked with identifying and eliminating criminals … before their crimes were committed. Now, in 2065, crime-solving is different, and justice leans more on sophisticated and trusted technology than on the instincts of the precogs. Sept. 21 series premiere Mondays 9/8:00c
LIMITLESS, based on the feature film, is a fast-paced drama about Brian Finch, who discovers the brain-boosting power of the mysterious drug NZT and is coerced by the FBI into using his extraordinary cognitive abilities to solve complex cases for them. Sept. 22 series premiere Tuesdays 10/9c
