Selasa, 30 Juli 2019

Google Alert - Science

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Science
As-it-happens update July 30, 2019
NEWS
Phys.Org
Icy planets once thought too cold to support life might have livable land areas above freezing, challenging the typical assumption of what kinds of planets might be habitable, a new study suggests. Scientists have long thought snowball planets—Earthlike ...
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Phys.Org
People are more likely to judge the performance of a group based on member's that are labelled as first or number one than they are on any other member, according to new research led by Cass Business School academic Dr. Janina Steinmetz. Dr. Steinmetz ...
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The MIT Tech
Professor Emeritus Samuel A. Bowring, a longtime MIT professor of geology, died on July 17 at age 65. Known for his exceptional skill as a field geologist and innovator in uranium-lead isotopic geochronology, Bowring worked to achieve unprecedented ...
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AccuWeather.com
August is just around the corner, and with the new month comes an event that stargazers have had marked on their calendars for months, one of the best meteor showers of the entire year. Here are three astronomy events to mark on your calendar throughout ...
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BGR
NASA's TESS — Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite — has been scanning the skies for a little over a year now and it's already returned a massive treasure trove of discoveries. One of its more recent discoveries also happens to be one of its most exciting.
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Mother Nature Network
This may be the luckiest star in the universe. After all, it's not every day that anything escapes the clutches of a supermassive black hole, much less a massive celestial body. In fact, in a research paper published online in Cornell's arXiv, scientists suggest the ...
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The Guardian
Doctors have turned the brain signals for speech into written sentences in a research project that aims to transform how patients with severe disabilities communicate in the future. The breakthrough is the first to demonstrate how the intention to say specific ...
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HowStuffWorks
Back in the second century B.C.E., the Chinese developed a spoon-shaped compass made of lodestone, or magnetite ore, which was capable of helping them figure out the directional position of north. Since then, inventors have found all sorts of other ways ...
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