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Nobody taught them: Scientists are stunned by how these tiny insects use the Milky Way as a guide to travel 1,000 km

Nobody taught them: Scientists are stunned by how these tiny insects use the Milky Way as a guide to travel 1,000 km

Mint23-06-2025
A small insect, the Bogong moth, travels 1,000 kilometres every year at night across Australia. These moths leave the heat of southeastern Australia in spring to rest in cool caves in the Australian Alps. They return in autumn to mate and die.
A new study shows that these moths use the stars to guide them, just like birds and humans. This is the first time such a skill has been found in insects.
The Bogong moth, now endangered, has a wingspan of about 5 cm. They sense Earth's magnetic field, which gives them a backup if the sky is cloudy.
Scientists studied around 400 Bogong moths to understand how they travel 1,000 km at night. Now, they are amazed at how these small-brained creatures manage such complex navigation.
These moths can see dim stars 15 times brighter than humans, helping them use the Milky Way as a guide. Other animals like monarch butterflies and dung beetles also use light for navigation, but not for such long, exact journeys.
What's truly special is that Bogong moths make this journey only once in their life and learn it by instinct. Their parents are dead before they're born. Yet, they know where to go.
Australian researcher Eric Warrant tested if they also used stars for guidance. He set up a special lab at his home, near the moths' destination in the Alps.
Using a light trap, he caught moths and fixed them to thin rods that allowed them to fly while recording their direction. The lab projected the southern night sky, just like it looked outside.
Amazingly, the moths flew in the correct migratory direction, south in spring and north in autumn. The experiment showed how they used star patterns to guide their way.
'It is an act of true navigation. They're able to use the stars as a compass to find a specific geographic direction to navigate, and this is a first for invertebrates,' CNN quoted Warrant as saying.
'With a very small brain, a very small nervous system, they are able to harness two relatively complex cues and not only detect them, but also use them to work out where to go,' Warrant said.
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Meta unveils wristband for controlling computers with hand gestures
Meta unveils wristband for controlling computers with hand gestures

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  • Time of India

Meta unveils wristband for controlling computers with hand gestures

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It now performs at a level it has never reached before."Meta's wristband uses a technique called electromyography, or EMG, to gather electrical signals from muscles in the forearm. These signals are produced by neurons in the spinal cord -- called alpha motor neurons -- that connect to individual muscle these neurons connect directly to the muscle fibres, the electrical signals are particularly strong -- so strong that they can be read from outside the skin. The signal also moves much faster than the muscles. If a device like Meta's wristband can read the signals, it can type much faster than your fingers."We can see the electrical signal before you finger even moves," Reardon has long provided a way for amputees to control prosthetic hands. 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Earth Is Spinning Faster, Says Study. This Could Force A Global Time Reset
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time2 days ago

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Earth Is Spinning Faster, Says Study. This Could Force A Global Time Reset

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Earth is spinning faster and scientists fear a Y2K-like Doomsday
Earth is spinning faster and scientists fear a Y2K-like Doomsday

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Time of India

Earth is spinning faster and scientists fear a Y2K-like Doomsday

Earth is spinning faster than usual this summer, raising concerns among scientists about potential disruptions to global timekeeping systems — with fears reminiscent of the Y2K scare . According to a CNN report citing data from the International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service and the US Naval Observatory, July 10 was the shortest day of the year so far, clocking in 1.36 milliseconds under the standard 24 hours. More short days are expected on July 22 and August 5. The Earth's rotation isn't perfectly consistent. Factors like lunar gravitational pull, seasonal atmospheric shifts, and the motion of the planet's liquid core cause slight variations in the length of a day. While the changes are typically imperceptible in daily life, even millisecond discrepancies can affect technologies that rely on hyper-accurate timing — such as telecommunications, satellite systems, and financial networks. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category Data Analytics healthcare Technology Finance Project Management Data Science Management Public Policy others Design Thinking Data Science Healthcare Leadership Artificial Intelligence Others Digital Marketing Product Management Cybersecurity PGDM Degree CXO MBA MCA Operations Management Skills you'll gain: Data Analysis & Visualization Predictive Analytics & Machine Learning Business Intelligence & Data-Driven Decision Making Analytics Strategy & Implementation Duration: 12 Weeks Indian School of Business Applied Business Analytics Starts on Jun 13, 2024 Get Details To maintain precise time, atomic clocks — which have been used since 1955 — track time to an extraordinary level of accuracy. Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), used worldwide, is based on atomic clocks. If Earth's rotation falls out of sync with UTC, leap seconds are added to bring them back into alignment — a process that's occurred 27 times since 1972. However, as Earth's spin has been accelerating, no leap second has been added since 2016. Scientists are now warning that a negative leap second — subtracting a second instead of adding one — may be required as early as 2035. 'There's never been a negative leap second,' physicist Judah Levine told CNN, but the chances of it happening are now around 40%. Such a move could wreak havoc, especially since many systems still struggle with positive leap seconds even after five decades. A negative leap second, never before implemented, could cause failures across systems that depend on stable, continuous time — evoking comparisons to the Y2K bug. Interestingly, climate change may be buying time. The CNN article, citing a study published last year by Agnew in the journal Nature, claimed that melting ice in Greenland and Antarctica is redistributing mass across the planet, subtly slowing Earth's spin and counteracting the speed-up. Live Events Benedikt Soja, an assistant professor at The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland, told CNN that if warming continues, "the effect of climate change could surpass the effect of the moon, which has been really driving Earth's rotation for the past few billions of years.' 'I think the (faster spinning) is still within reasonable boundaries, so it could be natural in a few years, we could see again a different situation, and long term, we could see the planet slowing down again. That would be my intuition, but you never know,' Soja added.

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