Kamis, 29 November 2018

Google Alert - Science

Google
Science
As-it-happens update November 29, 2018
NEWS
Time zones are always tricky - but interplanetary time differences are even harder to keep track of, and now that NASA's Mars InSight lander has successfully landed on the Red Planet, that's precisely what mission staff members have to do.
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Seismic sensors first picked up the event originating near an island between Madagascar and Africa. Then, alarm bells started ringing as far away as Chile, New Zealand and Canada.
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Experimental atomic clocks at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have achieved three new performance records, now ticking precisely enough to not only improve timekeeping and navigation, but also detect faint signals from gravity ...
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Michael D. Shaw is a biochemist and freelance writer. A graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles, and a protégé of the late Willard Libby, winner of the 1960 Nobel Prize in chemistry, Shaw also did postgraduate work at the Massachusetts ...
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NASA has its sights set on the moon, and the agency has selected the first batch of commercial project proposals it will include on its journey back to our nearest neighbor, and then on to Mars.
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After the joyous triumph and terror of landing InSight on Mars this past week, you might think NASA has earned a break. But no -- there's a lot of space out there and someone has to make more history exploring it.
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In the Ecuadorian Amazon, a newly-discovered wasp is turning a regularly social spider into a lone, lumbering zombie. The species of spider, Anelosimus eximius, create elaborate bucket-like webs with thousands of its family members.
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Wes Eisenhauer will get to add "spacecraft photographer" to his already impressive resume after being chosen by NASA to attend a rocket launch next month.
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Boston, Nov 29 MIT scientists, including one of Indian origin, have developed a cooling device that can preserve food and medications in hot, remote locations without electricity or fossil fuel-generated power.
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UT Southwestern biochemist and Breakthrough Prize winner Dr. Zhijian "James" Chen's newest study answers a longstanding question in the field of innate immunity.
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