9 Science Stories That Restore Our Faith in Humanity

2022-12-14
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The science news of 2022 has been strange, dramatic, intriguing and more than occasionally alarming—but the year also saw awe-inspiring breakthroughs and heartwarming successes. Here we’ve pulled together some of the most interesting positive stories of the year, plus a couple that are just plain cool. As Scientific American’s editors wrote in an August editorial, “Exploration is science in its most basic form—asking questions of the natural world and, we hope, using the answers for the betterment of everything on Earth.”

Folding Frenzy

Proteins perform crucial functions across the human body, and the twisty molecules’ actions are intimately tied to their intricate shapes. Researchers have sometimes spent years trying to determine individual protein structures. In 2022, however, the artificial intelligence program AlphaFold predicted the 3-D structures of about 200 million proteins—almost every one that is known. Scientific American talked with Demis Hassabis—CEO of the Google-owned company DeepMind, which developed AlphaFold—about the program’s creation, the power of knowing protein shapes and the future of artificial intelligence.

Save Our Snakes

A Texas Facebook group’s goal to identify locally found snakes illustrates a growing trend of wildlife enthusiasts on social media promoting accurate information and shooting down myths about much maligned creatures. Locals are learning which snakes are dangerous and which can be safely removed from the premises—or simply admired from afar. By engaging with such groups, people are learning to be less afraid of their scaly neighbors and to get through encounters without harming them.

Ultimate Selfie

This year researchers released the first image of Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at our galaxy’s center. This beast at the heart of the Milky Way was first proposed in the early 1960s. But it took a global network of observational facilities working as one virtual unit, called the Event Horizon Telescope, to pierce the 26,000 light-years’ worth of gas and dust, distorted space and destroyed matter that shrouded its form. The new image shows the ever changing doughnutlike halo of microwaves streaming from just outside the black hole’s event horizon, from which nothing can return.

A Glowing Reveal

Speaking of “milky,” researchers are getting closer to understanding mysterious, transient, miles-long stretches of ocean suffused with steady white light. While these “milky seas” were considered tall tales for more than a century, researchers eventually learned to discern the phenomenon using night-vision satellites and are poised to dispatch divers to explore when a long-lasting one comes along. This large-scale bioluminescence illuminates the vastness of what we still don’t know about Earth’s oceans.

Gut Feeling

Researchers helped revive a failing river near Seattle that urban construction had harshly straightened and narrowed. To do so, they restored its underresearched “gut”—the layer of stones and sediment between a riverbed and groundwater where microbes cycle nutrients and metabolize inorganic compounds into plant and bug food. A deep dive into the process reveals how a comparatively minor addition to restoration can have a major impact on reducing pollution and flooding and on regenerating biodiversity.

Emission Remission

A record-setting boost in renewable energy use helped keep global carbon dioxide emissions from spiking this year despite a global surge in natural gas prices potentially driving the mass use of coal. Energy sources such as wind and solar power may have avoided 600 million metric tons in additional carbon dioxide emissions during 2022. (These sources are also set to generate more power than coal did in the U.S. this year.)

High-Resolution Collab

Museum researchers are partnering with Indigenous North American groups to digitally replicate culturally important artifacts to safeguard them from damage. Such models can be used for preservation and education, as well as the production of physical replicas for display—and even for ritual use when the originals are too delicate, thanks to close collaboration with tribal officials.

Telescope Triumph

After decades of ballooning costs and production delays, the most powerful space observatory ever built launched on Christmas 2021 before beginning an eye-wateringly delicate unfolding process in the depths of space. Finally, the James Webb Space Telescope released its first full set of images this summer, revealing awe-inspiring vistas of the universe we call home and the promise of fascinating science to come.

Teary-Eyed Pups

And finally, this year we learned that dogs’ eyes actually well up with tears when they are reunited with their owners, an oxytocin-driven reaction that seems to spark humans’ caregiving behavior.

参考译文
9个科学故事,让我们恢复对人性的信心
2022年的科学新闻是奇怪的、戏剧性的、有趣的,偶尔也令人担忧——但这一年也见证了令人敬畏的突破和温暖人心的成功。这里我们收集了一些今年最有趣的正面故事,还有一些非常酷的故事。正如《科学美国人》的编辑们在8月份的社论中所写的那样,“探索是科学的最基本形式——对自然界提出问题,我们希望用这些问题的答案来改善地球上的一切。”蛋白质在人体中起着至关重要的作用,这些扭曲的分子的活动与其复杂的形状密切相关。研究人员有时花费数年时间试图确定单个蛋白质结构。然而,在2022年,人工智能程序AlphaFold预测了大约2亿个蛋白质的3d结构——几乎所有已知的蛋白质。《科学美国人》采访了谷歌旗下DeepMind公司的首席执行官德米斯·哈萨比斯,他开发了alphafold,谈论了这个程序的创建、了解蛋白质形状的力量以及人工智能的未来。德克萨斯州一个脸书小组的目标是识别当地发现的蛇,这表明野生动物爱好者在社交媒体上宣传准确的信息,推翻关于许多恶毒生物的神话,这一趋势正在增长。当地人正在学习哪些蛇是危险的,哪些蛇可以安全地从建筑物中移走,或者只是在远处欣赏。通过与这样的团体接触,人们正在学习不那么害怕他们有鳞片的邻居,并在不伤害他们的情况下度过遭遇。今年,研究人员发布了位于银河系中心的超大质量黑洞人马座A*的第一张图像。这个位于银河系中心的怪物在20世纪60年代初首次被提出。但它需要一个全球观测设施网络作为一个虚拟单位工作,称为事件视界望远镜(Event Horizon Telescope),才能穿透26000光年长的气体和尘埃,扭曲了空间,破坏了掩盖其形式的物质。这张新图像显示了不断变化的甜甜圈状微波光环,从黑洞视界外流出,没有任何东西可以从那里返回。说到“乳白色”,研究人员越来越接近于理解神秘的、短暂的、几英里长的海洋,它们弥漫着稳定的白光。虽然一个多世纪以来,这些“乳白色的海洋”一直被认为是无稽之谈,但研究人员最终学会了使用夜视卫星来识别这一现象,并准备在长期出现这种现象时派遣潜水员进行探索。这种大规模的生物发光揭示了我们对地球海洋的未知之处。研究人员帮助恢复了西雅图附近一条因城市建设而严重拉直和变窄的河流。为了做到这一点,他们恢复了研究不足的“肠道”——河床和地下水之间的一层石头和沉积物,微生物在这里循环营养物质,并将无机化合物代谢成植物和昆虫的食物。对这一过程的深入研究揭示了恢复过程中相对较小的增加如何对减少污染和洪水以及再生生物多样性产生重大影响。尽管全球天然气价格飙升可能会推动煤炭的大规模使用,但可再生能源使用的创纪录增长,帮助全球二氧化碳排放量今年没有飙升。在2022年,风能和太阳能等能源可能已经避免了6亿吨额外的二氧化碳排放。(在美国,这些能源今年的发电量也将超过煤炭。) 博物馆研究人员正在与北美土著团体合作,对具有重要文化意义的文物进行数字复制,以保护它们免受破坏。这样的模型可以用来保存和教育,也可以用来制作实物复制品以供展示,甚至当原件过于脆弱时,还可以用于仪式,这要归功于与部落官员的密切合作。经过几十年的成本膨胀和生产延误,有史以来最强大的太空天文台于2021年圣诞节发射,然后在太空深处开始了令人眼花缭乱的微妙展开过程。终于,詹姆斯·韦伯太空望远镜在今年夏天发布了第一组完整的图像,揭示了我们称之为家的宇宙的令人敬畏的远景,以及迷人的科学即将到来的希望。最后,今年我们了解到,当狗狗与主人团聚时,它们的眼睛实际上会流泪,这是一种催产素驱动的反应,似乎激发了人类的照顾行为。
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