Yeah it's tough: H3N2 doesn't show up on either the flu A or B tests, and also does a great job of evading the immunity you get from this season's flu shot.
Don't assume you're NOT sick just because you test negative! (I think I was sick with it in January.)
10.03.2026 22:53
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And warning: this will NOT test for the dominant flu strain of the season: H3N2.
10.03.2026 22:50
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Thank you for that.
Appreciate your take.
Also, when you said "Aha - so you *are* interested in this topic!" I felt like the clown face meme. So well done!
10.03.2026 22:48
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The most important quantum advance of the 21st century
A century ago, quantum physics overthrew our view of a deterministic Universe. A profound 21st century theorem closes the door even further.
Of course, now I'm curious and you might have a very different take on it, what do you think about the PBR theorem?
I guess, in particular, do you think what I wrote about it recently is correct, or do you think I'm way off base?
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
10.03.2026 22:09
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That's fair. I mean, I'm only 47, and maybe the "we don't knows" or even the "we can't knows" about QM will someday yield to progress and better interrogation of nature.
As it stands now, there's much work on quantum foundations, a crapton of speculative theory, but very little telling evidence.
10.03.2026 22:01
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I like what you said about Oreskes; I hadn't heard that history, and I should probably go and learn about it!
That nature article... I mean, there are a LOT of people who are interested in that. I am not one of them, in fact I'm "anti" interested in that.
Philosophy is no substitute for physics.
10.03.2026 21:45
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The right way to be a scientific contrarian
Not everyone accepts the scientific consensus; some even make careers out of challenging it. But only a select few do it the right way.
The right way to be a scientific contrarian
Contrarians, or those who reject the consensus view, are important to the progression of science.
But there's a right and wrong way to do it.
How does your favorite one stack up?
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
#science #physics #astro #space
10.03.2026 15:55
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So sorry for your loss Michele.
09.03.2026 17:38
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JWST peers inside a dying star's "exposed cranium"
Resembling a cosmic brain, the exposed cranium nebula instead shows a dying, massive star, as JWST reveals. Its fate remains uncertain.
JWST peers inside a dying starβs βexposed craniumβ
In 2013, NASA's Spitzer observed PMR 1, finding a structure that resembles a human brain.
Today, JWST actually resolves the Exposed Cranium Nebula, revealing what's inside.
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
#space #JWST #astro #nebula
09.03.2026 16:37
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Starts With A Bang podcast #127 - Satellites and space pollution
What goes up into low-Earth orbit will eventually come down, bringing huge consequences with it. Be informed, not surprised!
Starts With A Bang podcast #127 β Satellites and space pollution
There are many excellent technological uses of satellite technology, but also many harms associated with the pollution of the environment around Earth.
When they clash, must we all lose?
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
#space #astro
07.03.2026 17:39
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Ask Ethan: Do signals degrade as they travel through space?
In traveling through the expanding Universe, particles slow down while light and gravitational waves redshift. What degrades and what won't?
Ask Ethan: Do signals degrade as they travel through space?
Light and gravitational waves redshift, sure, as they travel through the expanding Universe.
But do those signals degrade and deteriorate, and if so, what do we lose?
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
#space #physics #astro
06.03.2026 17:02
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No, particle physics colliders cannot ever destroy the Universe
Smashing things together at unprecedented energies sounds dangerous. But it's nothing the Universe hasn't already seen, and survived.
No, particle physics colliders cannot ever destroy the Universe
Every time we push the energy frontier in particle physics, laypersons fear that the world, or even the Universe, will be destroyed.
Here's why we're certain it's all safe... for now.
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
#physics #astro
05.03.2026 17:27
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Amazing the variety of conclusions one can reach choosing different assumptions in the absence of a single positive signal.
Hence the weak sauce nature of all of our constraints; we can only say "no more than this."
04.03.2026 16:54
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Can the Drake equation's final term predict humanity's demise?
No civilization, no matter how successful, can last forever. What does the non-detection of intelligent aliens mean for our own longevity?
Can the Drake equationβs final term predict humanityβs demise?
Here in 2026, we still have not found the existence of any life beyond Earth.
What does that mean for the Drake equation, the longevity of intelligent civilizations, and humanity's future?
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
#space #astro
04.03.2026 15:58
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My first science video in 3 years!
YouTube video by Physics Girl
If you haven't been aware, Physics Girl (Dianna Cowern), @thephysicsgirl.bsky.social here on BlueSky, has been sick with long COVID, and specifically COVID-induced ME/CFS, since 2022.
Here is her first science video in 3+ years.
Here's how solar neutrinos work!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3m3...
03.03.2026 19:45
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This is a good point: why put your energy into ragebait when there are actually things we want to do?
03.03.2026 17:22
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You must've missed his rage-inducing interview in NYTopinion about 8 months ago with Peter Thiel, where he normalized Thiel's advocating for the extinction of the human race and to have it replaced with a Borg-like transhumanist collective.
03.03.2026 16:55
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Did Hubble's new "dark galaxy" kill modified gravity?
The discovery of CDG-2, a galaxy that's more than 99.9% dark matter, could reveal a new population of ultra-faint galaxies. But is it real?
Did Hubbleβs new βdark galaxyβ kill modified gravity?
Hundreds of millions of light-years away, a collection of four globular clusters was found orbiting... nothing.
Is there a "dark galaxy" there, and if so, is modified gravity now dead?
bigthink.com/starts-with-...
#space #astro #gravity
03.03.2026 16:54
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One of the things that bothered me very much about public school, and it was Mr. Massi (remember!) who taught us this, is that the job of public education is not to teach us what America is, but to instill the mythos of "America, and it's working" in us.
We get fed a lot of that by pundits, too.
03.03.2026 13:26
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A shifting Overton window will do that.
Eisenhower would practically be a socialist today.
03.03.2026 08:41
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And yet he and David Brooks and Bret Stephens continue to make careers out of saying the most Archie Bunker-esque things, but with a veneer of Christopher Rufo over it.
I can't even tell which of them is the worst tbh. Maybe you know?
03.03.2026 08:07
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It's hard because there is good journalism in there.
And there are quality opinions that are published there.
But it also fails the Voltaire paradox of intolerance real hard.
They aren't just tolerant of it; they seek the traffic that ragebait brings them. And there is so much that's enraging.
03.03.2026 07:22
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No. This was a condemnation of every one of those opinion columnists you asserted was superb.
As opinion columnists, none of them are or were superb in any way. All of them are, as I said earlier, choices that the editorial board made with every piece.
I'll stand by that one.
03.03.2026 06:49
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That's fine. I got excited and got hyperbolic here.
There are plenty of sane people saying sane things separate from, just alongside, the inhumane murder justifiers, grifters, and advocates of revoking human rights for some.
03.03.2026 05:50
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I don't buy this argument. You can't look at the best thing someone's ever done and have it absolve them of the horrors they inflicted on society with the worst of their advocacy.
But I have all sorts of issues with how journalism is practiced, and with all major newspaper editorial boards today.
03.03.2026 05:24
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I mean I even gave kudos to Kristof and I love nearly all of what Bouie writes, so yes, maybe I got a little hyperbolic.
Still, the point of "we platformed 5 good people and X Nazi sympathizers, and that's good editorial boarding" is not really acceptable to me when X is ever so much more than 0.
03.03.2026 05:16
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The problem with being around for so long is that so much of our knowledge is there, but it gets jumbled up and smooshed together.
Just a sign of experience!
02.03.2026 21:21
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Sounds like this is the best information we have at present.
02.03.2026 20:28
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(The answer is going to be interesting, sure, but the uncertainties, or a "cone of uncertainty" plus a "speed uncertainty" is almost more informative than the approximation.)
02.03.2026 20:21
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