What Makes Sulfur Smell So Bad?

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If you’ve ever caught a whiff of natural gas, you know the stench is similar to that of bad eggs or rotting cabbage. But the unsavory smell also saves lives: Gas leaks put our homes at risk for fires and explosions, and can even cause asphyxiation and death. Since pure natural gas (a.k.a. methane) has no smell, utility companies add smelly, sulfur-containing odorants called mercaptans, or thiols, to warn us if anything is amiss with our pipelines.

In fact, scientists say that our ability to discern even miniscule levels of volatile sulfur compounds is key to human survival in general, as it helps us detect rotten food, atmospheres with low oxygen levels, and even the urine of potential predators. That’s why chemists and neurobiologists from the University of Albany set out to find which of the nose’s olfactory receptors are responsible for their stench, along with factors that affect our sensitivity to it. Their results were recently published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Olfactory receptors are present in specialized sensory cells called olfactory sensory neurons, which line our noses. They’re responsible for detecting molecules in our surroundings and sending messages to our brain so that we can recognize and label a smell. Led by chemistry professor Eric Block, the scientists located the receptor—known as OR2T11—that’s most responsive to thiols.

The researchers also found that the presence of copper ions in our nose’s mucus greatly amplifies our sensitivity to them. “Using molecular dynamics simulations, the team found two binding sites which contained copper,” Chemistry World explained. “The importance of both sites in detecting thiols was confirmed by site-directed mutagenesis: genetically engineered receptors lacking the amino acids responsible for copper binding lost all functionality.”

“Obviously it is essential for everyone to be able to detect gas leaks by recognizing the smell of the sulfur odorant,” Block said in a release. “Unfortunately, some people have a diminished sense of smell, or the absence of smell all together. Understanding how we smell sulfur could help doctors treat those who are not responsive it.”

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October 7, 2016 – 3:00pm

Turkish Officials Erect Statue Honoring Beloved Street Cat

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City authorities in Istanbul, Turkey have immortalized a beloved neighborhood street cat by installing a bronze statue in his honor, The Independent reports.

Tombili (roughly translated as “chubby” in Turkish) was a tubby grey-and-white tabby known locally for his relaxed attitude, and worldwide for lounging on a set of sidewalk steps in the city’s Ziverbey section. The cat became famous online after a picture of him in repose circulated on social media. The much-adored feline died on August 1, 2016, following a mysterious month-long illness.

Locals mourned Tombili, and posted street flyers that read, “You will live on in our hearts, mascot of our street,” the Hurriyet Daily News reports. But some people wanted to erect a more permanent homage to the feline, and they launched a Change.org petition asking local officials to make it happen.

The petition garnered 17,000 signatures, and the Kadıköy Municipality gave Turkish artist Seval Şahin the green light to sculpt Tombili in his favorite position: sprawled on the pavement with one arm propping up his pudgy torso.

The statue was unveiled on October 4—World Animal Day—and visitors left food, flowers, and candles to pay tribute to the mellow kitty. Check out a few pictures of the sculpture below.

[h/t The Independent]

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October 5, 2016 – 3:00am

‘Gilmore Girls’ Fans Can Now Drink Coffee at a Real-Life Luke’s Diner

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Netflix

Luke Danes brews the best coffee in Stars Hollow—and on October 5, Gilmore Girls fans can sample it in real life. As Entertainment Weekly reports, Netflix is promoting its new four-episode miniseries, Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, by converting 200 cafes and coffee shops into Luke’s Diner pop-ups.

Your barista probably won’t be a flannel-clad Scott Patterson, but employees at the pop-up shops across the U.S. and Canada will don “Luke’s Diner” T-shirts and aprons. The first 200 customers will be treated to free 12-ounce cups of coffee (plus, what Netflix bills as a “fun surprise” hidden under their Gilmore Girls-themed coffee sleeves).

Want to live a morning in the lives of Lorelai and Rory? The Luke’s Diner pop-ups will run from 7 a.m. to 12 p.m., and a full list of participating shops is available online (on a mock Stars Hollow town website, no less).

[h/t Entertainment Weekly]

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October 4, 2016 – 2:15pm

The Entire Harry Potter Franchise Is Coming to IMAX for One Week Only

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Warner Bros

This Halloween season, the Harry Potter franchise is apparating back into movie theaters for a limited time only. As Variety reports, IMAX and Warner Bros. have joined forces to screen all eight films in 2D for one week, beginning on Thursday, October 13.

The Harry Potter marathon is designed to promote the forthcoming film Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, an adaptation of J.K. Rowling’s 2001 book of the same name that’s slated for a November 18 release. It also marks the first time that Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets have been shown in IMAX theaters.

Making the occasion even more festive, Warner Bros will host a free Global Fan Event on October 13th to celebrate Fantastic Beasts. Viewers in select cities around the world will be shown a sneak peek of the upcoming movie, and London and Los Angeles audiences will be treated to in-person actor appearances and a Q&A session.

For more information—including how to get tickets—visit the IMAX website.

[h/t Variety]

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October 4, 2016 – 11:45am

From Pollination to Patent: How Farmers Create New Apple Varieties

filed under: Food

You’ve likely seen Golden Delicious, McIntosh, and Cortland apples lining the shelves of your local grocery store, but did you know that more than 7500 varieties of the fruit are grown around the world? Each has its own unique color, taste, and size, and some even have fanciful names like Cosmic Crisp or Pixie Crunch. In the video above, TED-Ed host Theresa Doud explains why—and how—farmers breed new apple types, tracing the lengthy process from pollination to patent.

[h/t The Kid Should See This]

Banner image: iStock

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October 4, 2016 – 3:00am

Women Are Less Interested Than Men in Becoming Top Bosses

filed under: Work
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Women hold nearly 52 percent of all professional-level jobs, but 75 percent of executive- and senior-level officials are men. Meanwhile, only 4.6 percent of CEOs at S&P 500 companies are female. Researchers have chalked this disparity up to a number of factors, a large one being that women presumably don’t want to sacrifice work-life balance or a family for a career. But according to a new analysis conducted by Sheryl Sandberg’s nonprofit LeanIn.Org, many women simply aren’t interested in becoming a top boss—and they provide a variety of reasons for their decision.

LeanIn.Org teamed up with management consulting firm McKinsey & Company to conduct the “Women in the Workplace 2016” report. They collected 132 companies’ pipeline data and surveyed more than 34,000 employees about their career opportunities and goals.

Many of the findings are similar to insights culled from other workplace studies (for example, women do in fact ask for raises, but are less likely to receive them). But the Women in the Workplace study also revealed that only 40 percent of senior female managers said they wanted a top executive job, in contrast with 56 percent of men.

When asked why they don’t want to be a top executive, 42 percent of both women and men said “I wouldn’t be able to balance family and work commitments.” Their opinions differed, however, when imagining the experience of being at the top. A third of women, compared to a fifth of men, said they didn’t want the pressure that comes with a top-level job. And only 43 percent of women, compared to 51 percent of men, believed becoming a top executive would “significantly improve their ability to impact the business.” According to the report, this may be because “women may not think their ideas and contributions carry the same weight as men’s.”

Even if a woman does want to become a CEO, she faces a much more difficult climb than her male co-workers—partly because her chances for advancement are thwarted early on in her career. The survey found that for every 100 women promoted to their first managerial position, 130 men are promoted, making it harder for women to progress into leadership positions. In general, fewer women are also hired from the outside than men, and when they do get their feet in the door they receive “less access to the people, input, and opportunities that accelerate careers,” the report states. It’s no surprise, then, that the report also shows that early-level female employees are nearly three times as likely as men to think their gender will hinder them, career-wise.

“This report is a reminder, yet again, of how much is left to do,” Sandberg concluded in an editorial for The Wall Street Journal. In order to close these gaps, companies need to advocate for gender diversity, provide gender-bias training for managers, and address gender stereotypes head-on.

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October 3, 2016 – 7:00pm

See ‘Stranger Things’ Reimagined as an 8-Bit Video Game

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YouTube

Recent sci-fi thriller series Stranger Things was an unapologetic homage to ‘80s pop culture, and if watching it inspired you to dig out your old Atari 2600 and revisit The Clash’s Combat Rock, you’ll love this 8-bit remake of the hit Netflix show, originally spotted by Vulture.

David and Henry Dutton—the team behind CineFix’s retro video game parody show, 8-Bit Cinema—imagined how Stranger Things would look as an old-school, pixelated computer game. Tiny animated figures fight monsters, explore The Upside Down, and recreate other key scenes, some of which are recast as “missions” (example: give Eleven frozen waffles and a blonde wig).

Watch the entire thing below, or visit 8-Bit Cinema’s channel to view other nostalgia-inducing clips. Sorry, gamers, Stranger Things isn’t actually playable, but maybe a developer will take a cue from entertainment website Newgrounds.com (which once created a hilarious 2D homage to 2003 cult movie The Room) and make Stranger Things: The Video Game a reality. 

[h/t Vulture]

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October 3, 2016 – 2:30pm

Browse the Books Owned by Your Favorite Fictional Characters

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Writers love to read, so it’s no surprise that their fictional characters often have a book in hand. myprint247, a UK-based commercial printing business, culled an assortment of imaginary tomes referenced in books, movies, TV shows, and video games, and listed them all in the infographic below.

As Co.Create points out, the infographic’s title is a tad misleading. All of these books are fictional to us, but within the confines of a make-believe universe, many of them would be viewed as non-fiction (take, for example, Hogwarts: A History). Technicalities aside, the titles provide a fascinating insight into their owners’ worlds and lives. Browse the fictional works and see which ones might catch your eye at a real-life bookstore or library.

[h/t Adweek]

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October 3, 2016 – 3:00am

This Undersea Museum Helps Conserve Coral Life

One of Yucatán’s most fascinating tourist attractions sits 25 feet underwater, on the Caribbean seabed. Situated between Cancun and the nearby Isla Mujeres, the Museo Subacuático de Arte (MUSA) is a living art museum dedicated to environmental preservation and awareness. The dive location contains more than 500 porous cement sculptures, which are designed to promote the growth of seaweed, coral, and algae. As marine life colonizes and feeds off the statues, the cement figures will gradually transform into a giant coral reef.

Take a vicarious swim through the MUSA by watching Great Big Story’s video above.

[h/t Great Big Story]

Banner image: Andy Blackledge via Flickr // CC BY 2.0
 
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October 2, 2016 – 6:00am

‘Toy Story’-Inspired Vans Are Coming Soon

Soon, you’ll be able to wear your love for Pixar on your sleeve and your feet. io9 reports that the Disney-owned computer animation film studio is collaborating with skatewear label Vans to create a line of Toy Story-inspired shoes.

Details like availability and pricing are currently under wraps, but Vans recently previewed a few images of the sneakers on social media. One pair is white, purple, and green—just like Buzz Lightyear’s spacesuit—while another is cow-printed, and pays homage to Woody’s cowboy style. They even have the name “Andy” doodled on their soles. 

Vans’s website refers to the line as a “Holiday collection,” so it’s a safe guess that its Toy Story sneakers will be officially unveiled later this fall or winter. For more info, you can sign up for email updates online, or check out some pictures below.

[h/t i09]

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September 30, 2016 – 5:00pm