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Hurricane Dorian: How NASA and NOAA Are Tracking the Storm from Space No matter how you look at it, Hurricane Dorian is a scary sight. But the more eyes on the storm, the better chance meteorologists and emergency responders have to keep people safe. And so NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ...
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Defrosting surfaces in seconds In the future, a delayed flight due to ice will be no cause for a meltdown. A group of researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Kyushu University has developed a way to remove ice and frost from surfaces extremely efficiently, using less ...
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Deep Space Antenna 1 Deep Space Antenna 1 is ESA's first 35-m deep dish, staring out to space to communicate with missions far from home. Located 140 kilometers north of Perth, Western Australia, close to the village of New Norcia, this giant antenna is in the perfect spot to scan ...
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There's fungus among us, and it might kill off the spotted lanternfly in Pa. As Pennsylvania continues to lose ground in the war against the spotted lanternfly, a new hope is on the horizon. Scientists from Penn State and Cornell University have teamed up in developing a potential biopesticide derived from a naturally occurring fungi ...
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Lack of oxygen doesn't kill infant brain cells Date: August 29, 2019; Source: Oregon Health & Science University; Summary: Research raises new concerns about the vulnerability of the preterm brain to hypoxia. Results confirm that brain cells do not die as previously believed. Rather, hippocampal cells ...
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The structure of beetle scales could help scientists create sustainable paint Scientists at the University of Sheffield have discovered the potential to make white sustainable paint using recycled plastic waste by mimicking the structure of the Cyphochilus beetle's scales, which contain one of the brightest whites found in nature.
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NASA switches on its Deep Space Atomic Clock The appropriately named Deep Space Atomic Clock was successfully activated last week after it launched in June, NASA said. Global Positioning System satellites that orbit Earth use atomic clocks for precise time-keeping, NASA said, but those aren't made ...
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