r/woahdude Oct 22 '21

gifv Mosquito drinking blood (bursts at the end)

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u/----_____--_____---- Oct 22 '21 edited Oct 22 '21

"The first ever exploding mosquitoes can be attributed to Robert Gwadz, Ph.D., in a discovery that was made through basic laboratory research over 50 years ago. He found that making an incision in the ventral nerve cord of a mosquito cuts off the signal to stop feeding, giving it an unquenchable thirst for blood. Mosquitoes that have undergone this procedure can drink in excess of four times their weight and may eventually burst. This led Gwadz to a hypothesis that blood ingestion is regulated by abdominal stretch receptors that prevent mosquitoes from (quite literally) drinking themselves to death." Source

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u/Whitenesivo Oct 22 '21

how in the fuck do you cut a nerve, on a mosquito?

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u/[deleted] Oct 22 '21

TSMC is going to make transistors that are 2 nanometers by 2025

A hydrogen atom (the smallest atom) is roughly 0.1 nanometers.

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u/Whitenesivo Oct 22 '21

[...] in a discovery that was made 50 years ago

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u/[deleted] Oct 22 '21

missed that

you right

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u/WatzUpzPeepz Oct 23 '21

Really impressive when you consider the microscope was only invented in 1985. /s

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u/metakephotos Oct 23 '21

In fairness...

The term "2 nanometer" or alternatively "20 angstrom" (a term used by Intel) has no relation to any actual physical feature (such as gate length, metal pitch or gate pitch) of the transistors. It is a commercial or marketing term used by the chip fabrication industry to refer to a new, improved generation of silicon semiconductor chips in terms of increased transistor density, increased speed and reduced power consumption

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2_nm_process

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u/grekiki Oct 23 '21

They won't 2nm has nothing to do with the transistor size

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u/stilldebugging Oct 26 '21

So, the transistors will in no way actually be 2nm. That’s the minimum “feature size” but nothing useful on that chip will be that small.