Senin, 03 Juni 2019

Google Alert - Science

Google
Science
As-it-happens update June 3, 2019
NEWS
CNN
CNN Film 'Apollo 11' explores the exhilaration of humanity's first landing on the moon through newly-discovered and restored archival footage. Watch the TV premiere of this documentary Sunday, June 23 at 9 p.m. ET/PT. (CNN) NASA astronaut Nick Hague ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Washington Times
There are new concerns about the world's first genetically modified babies. It appears that the genetic variation a Chinese scientist was trying to recreate when he edited twin girls' DNA may be more harmful than helpful to health overall, according to a study ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
Isolated for billions of years, a galaxy with more dark matter packed into its core than expected has been identified by astronomers using data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. The galaxy, known as Markarian 1216 (abbreviated as Mrk 1216), contains ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
Astronomers have directly imaged two exoplanets that are gravitationally carving out a wide gap within a planet-forming disk surrounding a young star. While over a dozen exoplanets have been directly imaged, this is only the second multi-planet system to be ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Smithsonian
This is the second in a five-part series written by experts featured in the Smithsonian's new Hall of Fossils—Deep Time exhibition opening June 8 at the National Museum of Natural History. The full series can be found by visiting our Deep Time Special Report.
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
The New Guinean frog Sphenophryne cornuta carrying its young on its back. Credit: Stephen J Richards. New Guinea is one of the only places in the world where frogs are safe from the species-destroying chytrid fungus. An international team of scientists has ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel
"It really is quite uncomfortable. It shouldn't exist; it shouldn't be real," Marla Geha, an astronomer at Yale University , said in 2018 of a small, strange galaxy a small galaxy that seems to contain none of the invisible stuff known as dark matter. "Yet if you look at ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Science Magazine
To track the biological health of oceans, researchers use cameras, satellite images, and, increasingly, DNA shed directly into the water. But capturing genetic material in the sea is a tough task: Scientists must sift through massive amounts of water to dredge ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel
A group of researchers has identified and characterized for the first time in a complete way a powerful eruption in the atmosphere of the active star HR 9024, marked by an intense flash of X-rays followed by the emission of a giant bubble of plasma. This is the ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Earth.com
Short-finned pilot whales are found over a wide swath of the world's oceans, with habitats in the Indian, and Pacific, and North Atlantic oceans. Despite this wide distribution, the whales have been recognized as a single species—but a recent study has found ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
New Scientist
Daily meditation guided by an app may help improve memory and attention. After six weeks of using the app, adults performed better on tasks aimed at testing these attributes than a control group. David Ziegler at the University of California, San Francisco, ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
KUTV 2News
In this image taken from NASA Television, a SpaceX shipment prepares to arrive at the International Space Station following a weekend launch, Monday, May 6, 2019. The Dragon capsule reached the orbiting complex Monday, delivering 5,500 pounds ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
SlashGear
Researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have developed a soft robot that could lead to fully untethered robots for space exploration, search and rescue systems, biomimetics, medical surgery, ...
Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
See more results | Edit this alert
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts.
RSS Receive this alert as RSS feed
Send Feedback

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar