Selasa, 02 Mei 2023

Google Alert - Science

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Science
Daily update May 3, 2023
NEWS
Space.com
"Water vapor in an atmosphere on a hot rocky planet would represent a major breakthrough for exoplanet science," principal investigator behind the findings and Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory researcher, Kevin Stevenson said in a ...
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Scientific American
A Japanese spacecraft launching next year will attempt to bring samples back from Phobos. The mission will build on exciting new results from a United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.) orbiter at Mars that suggest a planetary origin for the two moons.
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The Weather Channel
Summer is here and so is our enthusiasm to make the most of the vacation period. But with May being almost unbearably hot, stepping out during the day might not be the smartest thing to do. Luckily for us, there's a whole bunch of amazing celestial ...
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Phys.Org
A series of chemical experiments show how solar particles, colliding with gases in Earth's early atmosphere, can form amino acids and carboxylic acids, the basic building blocks of proteins and organic life. The findings were published in the journal Life.
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The New York Times
But the cosmological constant refused to die. And now it threatens to wreck physics and the universe. In the end, if this dark energy prevails, distant galaxies will eventually be speeding away so fast that ...
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BBC News
It teams with life but was home to fewer organisms during warmer periods of Earth's history, researchers found. In research led by the University of Exeter, scientists looked at two warm periods ...
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Astronomy Magazine
The Super Pressure Balloon-borne Imaging Telescope (SuperBIT) launched from Wānaka, New Zealand, on April 16 and has already captured stunning images of the Tarantula Nebula, kickstarting its 100-day hunt for dark matter.
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Phys.Org
A team from the University of Illinois has modeled improving photosynthesis through enzyme modification and simulated soybean growth with realistic climate conditions, determining to what extent the improvements in photosynthesis could result in ...
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Livescience.com
Hosting a myriad of soft-bodied marine creatures and their organs, which are scarcely preserved in the fossil record, the site resembles the world-renowned Cambrian deposits of Burgess Shale in Canada and Qingjiang biota in China.
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Popular Science
The tiny country of Wales on the western coast of Great Britain may now be home to one of the world's most unexpected fossil sites. Scientists found an "unusually well-preserved" deposit of over 150 species from 462 million years ago.
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