Soon, 'magic' DNA computer that grows itself

The Indian Express - ‎5 hours ago‎
In a first, scientists have designed a new, super-fast form of a 'magic' computer made of DNA molecules that grows as it computes and can outperform all standard systems in solving important practical problems

Soon, ‘magic’ DNA computer that grows itself

"But our new computer doesn't need to choose, for it can replicate itself and follow both paths at the same time, thus finding the answer faster"

By: PTI | London | Published:March 2, 2017 4:16 pm
computer, magic computer, DNA computer, computer grows itself, self growing computer, growing computer, universal turing machine, UTM, DNA, DNA computing, science, gadgets, science news “But our new computer doesn’t need to choose, for it can replicate itself and follow both paths at the same time, thus finding the answer faster” In a first, scientists have designed a new, super-fast form of a ‘magic’ computer made of DNA molecules that grows as it computes and can outperform all standard systems in solving important practical problems. Researchers from The University of Manchester in the UK showed the feasibility of engineering a universal Turing machine (UTM) – a computer that can be programmed to compute anything any other device can process. Electronic computers are a form of UTM, but no quantum UTM has yet been built.
The theoretical properties of such a computing machine, including its exponential boost in speed over electronic and quantum computers, have been well understood for many years – but the breakthrough demonstrates that it is actually possible to physically create a UTM using DNA molecules.
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“Imagine a computer is searching a maze and comes to a choice point, one path leading left, the other right. Electronic computers need to choose which path to follow first,” said Ross D King, from The University of Manchester. “But our new computer doesn’t need to choose, for it can replicate itself and follow both paths at the same time, thus finding the answer faster,” said King.
“This ‘magical’ property is possible because the computer’s processors are made of DNA rather than silicon chips. All electronic computers have a fixed number of chips,” he said. “Our computer’s ability to grow as it computes makes it faster than any other form of computer, and enables the solution of many computational problems previously considered impossible,” he added.
“Quantum computers are an exciting other form of computer, and they can also follow both paths in a maze, but only if the maze has certain symmetries, which greatly limits their use,” King said. “As DNA molecules are very small a desktop computer could potentially utilise more processors than all the electronic computers in the world combined – and therefore outperform the world’s current fastest supercomputer, while consuming a tiny fraction of its energy,” he said.
DNA computing is the performing of computations using biological molecules rather than traditional silicon chips. In DNA computing, information is represented using the four-character genetic alphabet – A (adenine), G (guanine), C (cytosine) and T (thymine) – rather than the binary alphabet, which is a series of 1s and 0s used by traditional computers. The research appears in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.
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India has capability to set up space station, says ISRO chief

india Updated: Feb 21, 2017 01:29 IST
PTI, Indore
ISRO

ISRO chairman Kiran Kumar Rao (R) displays models of the CARTOSAT-2 and Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C37) as he speaks to media after the launch of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C37) at Sriharikota on Febuary 15.(AFP Photo)

ISRO chairman AS Kiran Kumar on Monday said the country has the capability to set up a space station, but it needed a long-term approach and an ambitious planning.
His comment follows Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) display of technological prowess last week by launching 104 satellites in a single mission.
“We have all the capabilities to set up a space station. The day the country takes the decision, we will ‘ok’ the project. Just draw a policy and provide us necessary funds and time,” Kumar said here.
He was in the city to attend the foundation day ceremony of Raja Ramanna Center for Advanced Technology (RRCAT).
“We still talk about what would be the immediate benefits of a manned space mission. That is why the country hasn’t made up its mind about when to invest in a space station,” he said.
A long-term thinking was needed for setting up a space station, he said, adding “the sooner the better.”
Kumar said ISRO was also mulling tying up with the industry to enhance the country’s satellite launching capability.
Many more satellites were needed to keep a tab on the land and weather conditions and to enhance the communication network, he said.
This would be possible with increase in the number of satellite launches, for which the country needed to enhance the basic infrastructure and reduce the cost of equipment, he added.
The number of companies manufacturing small satellites has gone up across the world, but these companies could not launch them, therefore this area had immense commercial potential and India could tap it by enhancing the launch facilities, the ISRO chief said.

hole story of star and formations

Black hole fuels star formation?

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The researchers found that powerful radio jets from the black hole are stimulating the production of cold gas in the galaxy’s extended halo of hot gas. This supply of cold gas could eventually fuel future star birth

In a surprising discovery, astronomers have observed a black hole producing cold, star-making fuel from hot plasma jets and bubbles.
The researchers found that powerful radio jets from the black hole — which normally suppress star formation — are stimulating the production of cold gas in the galaxy’s extended halo of hot gas.
This newly identified supply of cold, dense gas could eventually fuel future star birth as well as feed the black hole itself, said the study published in the Astrophysical Journal .
The researchers studied a galaxy at the heart of the Phoenix Cluster, an uncommonly crowded collection of galaxies about 5.7 billion light-years from Earth.
The team analysed observations of the Phoenix cluster gathered by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA), a collection of 66 large radio telescopes spread over the desert of northern Chile. The researchers believe that the new findings may help explain the Phoenix cluster’s exceptional star-producing power. They may also provide new insights into how supermassive black holes and their host galaxies mutually grow and evolve.
“With ALMA we can see that there’s a direct link between these radio bubbles inflated by the supermassive black hole and the future fuel for galaxy growth,” said study lead author Helen Russell, an astronomer with the University of Cambridge in Britain.
What the researchers believe to be happening is that, as jets inflate bubbles of hot gas near the black hole, they drag behind them a wake of slightly cooler gas.
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The bubbles eventually detach from the jets and float further out into the galaxy cluster, where each bubble’s trail of gas cools, forming long filaments of extremely cold gas that condense and rain back onto the black hole as fuel for star formation.IANS