Selasa, 07 Maret 2023

Google Alert - Science

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Science
Daily update March 8, 2023
NEWS
Space.com
One of those excitedly waiting for that science bounty is Amy Williams, an assistant professor in geological sciences at the University of Florida in Gainesville. She is a NASA Perseverance rover participating scientist and has been a member of the NASA ...
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Space.com
NASA's Orion spacecraft performed better than expected on its first deep-space flight despite experiencing unpredicted loss of its heat shield material. In a teleconference on Tuesday (March 7), NASA leadership discussed Orion's performance on the ...
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Space.com
Will the universe end in a bang or a whimper? A pair of theoretical physicists have proposed a third path: perhaps the universe will never end. In a study that attempts to define the ...
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Space.com
March's full moon reaches its peak in the early hours on Tuesday (March 7) with the so-called Worm Moon rising just after sunset on Monday. According to In the Sky (opens in new tab) from New York City the moon will rise at 5:03 p.m. EST (2203 GMT) and ...
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Space.com
Twinkling stars blanket this new view of the Carina Nebula, a vast cloud of dust and gas that lies 7,500 light-years from Earth. NASA's Hubble Space Telescope captured this image in December 2022. The new picture isn't of the whole nebula, ...
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The New York Times
Since the dawn of the space age, the answer has been: It depends. For decades, lunar missions have operated on the time of the country that launched them. But with several lunar explorations heading for the launchpad, the European Space Agency has deemed ...
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NPR
A new study in the journal PLOS Biology finds that these humble insects can actually learn to solve puzzles from one another, suggesting that even some invertebrates like these social insects have a capacity for what we humans call "culture.".
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Scientific American
CLIMATEWIRE | U.S. scientists plan this month to launch a multiyear study of the stratosphere to help world leaders better understand whether it's possible to use solar geoengineering to counter global warming. And they're going back in time to do it.
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Livescience.com
The renowned Dutch astronomer Christiaan Huygens was probably nearsighted, a new study looking into the telescopes he built more than 300 years ago has found. The results even suggest what glasses the astronomer could have benefited from wearing ...
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Phys.Org
In this theory, each new universe crystallizes out of the seething background of inflation, imprinted with its own unique mix of physical laws. If physical laws similar to ours govern these other universes, then we ...
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