Mo Yousif
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mogreen.bsky.social
Mo Yousif
@mogreen.bsky.social
36 followers 39 following 86 posts
Sudanese 🇸🇩Botanist🍀, evolutionist, classic music lover, kitten lover 😺
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Open to MS Research Opportunities in Biology & Interdisciplinary Science
Hello everyone,
I’m Mo, a graduating botanist from the University of Khartoum with a deep passion for the origin of life, astrobiology, complex adaptive systems . As I prepare for my next academic chapter
I sent an email 📨 I'm deeply interested
Reposted by Mo Yousif
Reposted by Mo Yousif
Harvard and Peking University scientists have built new tools that can edit the DNA inside mitochondria, long unreachable by CRISPR

This could soon allow treatments for at least 150 diseases linked to faulty mitochondria, from blindness to heart failure

www.nature.com/articles/d41...
Client Challenge
www.nature.com
Robert May & James Yorke (1970s)
These mathematicians mathematized the topic. Yorke co-wrote the original paper "Period Three Implies Chaos" that gave the field its popular name. Robert May applied these models of chaos to ecology, showing how animal populations can boom and bust in unpredictable
Realized that systems transition into chaos through a series of period-doubling bifurcations,with universal
Mathematical parameters (now known as Feigenbaum Constants) governing them.His studies proved that chaos is governed by universal laws,which govern seemingly unrelated phenomena across nature
Geometric form, proving random complexity could be generated from simple, repetitive rules.
The Universalist: Mitchell Feigenbaum (1970s)
This physicist discovered that the process of going from order to disorder was not random. By studying everything from fluid flow to electronic circuits, he ..
3-Benoît Mandelbrot (1970s)
He asked a simple question: "How long is the coast of Britain?" The answer, he found, will be determined by how long your ruler is. This led him to the discovery of Fractals—endlessly intricate patterns repeating themselves at all scales. He gave chaos its beautiful..
That little error directed him to a massive conclusion: some systems have a Sensitive Dependence on Initial Conditions. He coined this term poetically: The Butterfly Effect sking himself if a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil would produce a tornado in Texas.
A meteorologist running weather simulations on a primitive machine. He eventually reran a simulation from the midpoint, approximating a figure from 0.506127 to 0.506. The weather forecast turned out to be completely different.
Its starting position that its behavior over the long term would be uncalculably unpredictable. He planted the seed that would grow into deterministic chaos.

2. The Accidental Father: Edward Lorenz (1960s)
Henri Poincaré (Late 1800s)
This French mathematician, long before the term was even invented, arrived at the fundamental idea by mistake. Trying to calculate the "Three-Body Problem" of physics, he found that even a system governed by strict Newtonian laws could be so sensitive to
It was a revelation created by a line of great brains who perceived the world differently.
The Architects of Chaos: The Scientists Who Uncovered Order in Disorder
We tend to think "chaos" equals complete randomness. But Chaos Theory teaches us the opposite: it's the science of the secret patterns and underlying structure found in fantastically complicated, unpredictable systems.
yes I'm interest 🔥I sent you already
opportunities (RA / direct PhD / MSc) in ecology, evolutionary biology, harsh environments, or related fields. Passionate about resilience, modeling, and symbiosis.
Feel free to DM or RT!
Spiranthes spiralis
Orchidaceae
Savadkuh, Iran
5th October 2023
Altitude: 650m

By Dr Sajad Alipour
Gentle reminder to share
7,500 light years away from us
Why it's too hard to find opportunity to study evolutionary biology
Daily reminder to share
𝘔𝘺𝘤𝘦𝘯𝘢 𝘳𝘰𝘴𝘦𝘰𝘧𝘭𝘢𝘷𝘢
New Zealand photographer takes stunning photos of super tiny 𝘔𝘺𝘤𝘦𝘯𝘢 𝘳𝘰𝘴𝘦𝘰𝘧𝘭𝘢𝘷𝘢
Reposted by Mo Yousif
#APOD Astronomy Picture of the Day

NGC 7380: The Wizard Nebula

Credit: Nevenka Blagovic Horvat & Miroslav Horvat

www.star.ucl.ac.uk/~apod/apod/a... 🧪🔭