Sunday, March 27, 2022

Google Alert - Science

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Science
Daily update March 27, 2022
NEWS
Columbia Daily Tribune
Nature is healing. It doesn't matter if you climb the tallest mountain, go for a stroll on a trail in a local park, cast a lure to fish in a farm pond or simply sit on a bench and listen to birds chirp. The power of nature will bring your blood ...
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Digital Trends
The long process of getting the James Webb Space Telescope ready for science operations continues, with the ongoing alignment of three of its instruments. Webb recently reached the major milestone of aligning its mirrors with its NIRCam instrument, ...
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Space.com
You can spot a triangular alignment of three bright worlds Sunday (March 27) and Monday (March 28) in the predawn hours. Involved in this collection of worlds will be cloudy Venus, bright Mars and ringed Saturn. Also joining them on Monday will be the ...
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Roanoke Times
Our morning sky presents a good demonstration that the planets do indeed move, and that they all don't move at the same rate, nor always in the same direction. The planetary trio of Venus, Mars, and Saturn end March and begin April by putting on a ...
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Forbes
Moon dust that astronaut Neil Armstrong collected during 1969's Apollo 11 mission that was man's first visit to the moon could sell for a seven-figure sum at auction in April – years after the space agency fought in court to keep the dust out of ...
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ABC News
Want to go to Mars? Then you could end up eating a lot of lettuce. But not any ordinary lettuce. Researchers from the University of California, Davis, have genetically engineered lettuce to produce a drug based on a human hormone that keeps bones ...
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The Indian Express
These waves move in the opposite direction to the rotation of the sun, three times faster than what should be allowed by hydrodynamics alone. Curiously, they also resemble a similar type of mysterious wave found in Earth's oceans: Rossby waves.
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The Jerusalem Post
Scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Harvard University, and the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics developed the model.
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Stuff.co.nz
'Newsweek' recently reported on some of the weirdest and most exciting exoplanet candidates detected by NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). So far, TESS has discovered over 5,000 alien worlds outside of our own solar system.
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SciTechDaily
MIRI, which will be the coldest of Webb's four instruments, is the only instrument that will be actively cooled by a cryogenic refrigerator, or cryocooler. This cryocooler uses helium gas to carry heat from MIRI's optics and detectors out to the warm side ...
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