Thursday, September 22, 2022

Google Alert - Science

Google
Science
Daily update September 22, 2022
NEWS
Spaceflight Now
Engineers filled up the Artemis 1 moon rocket with more than 750,000 gallons of super-cold propellants in a tanking test Wednesday at Kennedy Space Center after troubleshooting a persistent hydrogen leak. NASA's launch director said she was "extremely ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
Major volcanic eruptions could have caused mass extinctions throughout Earth's history, including the one that wiped out the dinosaurs around 66 million years ago. Currently, the leading theory to explain the mass extinction that saw the end of the ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Scientific American
The planet HIP 65426 b, as seen in four different wavelengths of infrared light by the NIRCam and MIRI instruments of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The small white star in each image denotes the location of HIP 65426 b's host star, which is ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
EarthSky
Now, mission scientists say it has added another scientific accomplishment to its list. NASA announced on September 19, 2022, that, for the first time, InSight has heard the impacts of four meteoroids as they crashed into the Martian surface. The lander ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The Planetary Society
Earth-based telescopes will be able to see this change, verifying the test was successful. A CubeSat deployed by DART will also observe the impact, while the European Space Agency's Hera probe will visit Dimorphos in 2026 to study the crater DART made.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Scientific American
When NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) slams into the tiny asteroid Dimorphos, it will be our first attempt to demonstrate our ability to deflect dangerous incoming asteroids. For decades, scientists around the world have been scanning the ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
MIT News
Peter Shor, the Morss Professor of Applied Mathematics at MIT, has been named a recipient of the 2023 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. He shares the $3 million prize with three others for "foundational work in the field of quantum ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
CNET
When we imagine a world embraced by cosmic haloes, we of course envision Saturn. One might argue that Saturn based its entire personality on those dazzling rings -- and rightfully so. They're solid. Easily visible. Luxurious even.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
It may be hard to imagine that the debris of violent heavy ion collisions—which dissolve the boundaries of protons and neutrons and produce thousands of new particles—can be used to gain detailed insight into the properties of nucleons.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
Animations of the relative heights of the cloud tops of Jupiter reveal delicately textured swirls and peaks that resemble the frosting on top of a cupcake. The results have been presented today by citizen scientist and professional mathematician and ...
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