Kamis, 30 Mei 2019

Google Alert - Science

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Science
As-it-happens update May 30, 2019
NEWS
Space.com
A Russian rocket lit up the night sky over Baikonur Cosmodrome Thursday (May 30) to launch a powerful new communications satellite into orbit. The heavy-lift Proton-M rocket lifted off at 1:42 p.m. EDT (1742 GMT) carrying the Yamal-601 communications ...
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Smithsonian
Over the weekend, a "train" of 60 shiny Starlink satellites launched by the aerospace company SpaceX followed each other across the night sky, the first installment of a network of 12,000 satellites designed to bring satellite broadband to people on the surface ...
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Phys.Org
In this image, numerous sweeping arcs seem to congregate at various bright regions. You may wonder: What is being shown? Air traffic routes? Information moving around the global internet? Magnetic fields looping across active areas on the Sun? In fact ...
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fox2now.com
Extraterrestrial travel is all the rage: Elon Musk's SpaceX has pledged to put the first humans on Mars. Amazon chief Jeff Bezos has his sights set on the moon. And NASA wants to speed up its plan to send astronauts back into deep space. But if these bold ...
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Digital Trends
How do science fiction movies get away with not having their A-list actors spend the whole time wearing bulky space suits on far-off planets? Simple: They use the trope of terraforming or oxygen generators to explain how it's possible to walk around on ...
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Cosmos
It's not quite a "beam me up, Scotty" moment, but the successful teleporting of a complete quantum logic operation using ions could be the start of something big. At very least, say physicists from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in the ...
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Newsweek
Date: May 30, 2019; Source: American Psychological Association; Summary: Many people, including educators, believe learning styles are set at birth and predict both academic and career success even though there is no scientific evidence to support this ...
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Mirage News
The Puget Sound area is vulnerable to several types of seismic risks. We might fixate on "The Really Big One" – the offshore hazard famously profiled in The New Yorker – but other dangers lurk closer underfoot, and might actually deliver more damage to ...
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