Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Google Alert - Science

Google
Science
Daily update June 1, 2021
NEWS
The New York Times
THE NINTH METAL By Benjamin Percy. There are many novels about the end of the world; much rarer are books that don't destroy all life on Earth, just kind of screw around with it a little to see what happens. In Tom Perrotta's "The Leftovers," a sizable chunk ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
The sun has one particular rhythm, lasting approximately 11 years, in which its polar magnetic field flips polarity. Sunspots serve as an indicator of this change. Indeed, it's often known as "the sunspot cycle.".
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The New York Times
Sweeping new research found that heat-related deaths in warm seasons were boosted by climate change by an average of 37 percent.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
Glacial-interglacial cycles strongly impact patterns of climate change in many parts of the world, and were also assumed to regulate environmental changes in Africa during the critical period of human evolution over the last ~1 million years.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The Weather Channel
When seen from the Earth, our galaxy appears like a band of light with droplets of milk scattered all across the night sky—a sight to behold! Formed about 13.51 billion years ago, this large barred-spiral galaxy contains billions of stars and innumerable planets ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
EarthSky
Mostly cloudy sky, clouds drift over rusty landscape. Six images stitched together into a gif show rare clouds on Mars drifting over Mount Sharp. NASA's Curiosity rover took these images on March 19, 2021. Image via NASA/ JPL-Caltech/ MSSS.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
Electrical engineers at the University of California San Diego developed a technology that improves the resolution of an ordinary light microscope so that it can be used to directly observe finer structures and details in living cells. The technology turns a ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
CBS News
The largest of the asteroids, named 2021 KT1, is approximately 600 feet, about the size of the Seattle Space Needle and taller than the Washington Monument. However, scientists believe it could be as large as 1,049 feet, comparative in size to New York City's ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
In many species including humans, the cells responsible for reproduction, the germ cells, are often highly interconnected and share their cytoplasm. In the hermaphrodite nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, up to 500 germ cells are connected to each other in ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The New York Times
The dentition of the gumboot chiton, a lumbering mollusk, contains a super-hard mineral never before seen in a living animal.
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

No comments:

Post a Comment