Wednesday, October 5, 2022

Google Alert - Science

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Science
Daily update October 5, 2022
NEWS
The New York Times
The launching of NASA astronauts on SpaceX rockets has become routinely commonplace, but a Russian astronaut has yet to travel aboard the company's Crew Dragon capsule. That will change on Wednesday when the Crew-5 mission takes four astronauts to the ...
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CNET
The Indian Space Research Organization says its Mangalyaan spacecraft has run out of fuel and is "non-recoverable." Monisha Ravisetti headshot. Monisha ...
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CNN
At first glance, a new image captured by a telescope in Chile looks like a dazzling comet streaking across the night sky, followed by a long, glowing tail. Instead, it's the debris plume created when NASA's DART spacecraft crashed into the asteroid ...
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Scientific American
This year's Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded in equal parts to Alain Aspect of the University of Paris–Saclay, John F. Clauser of J. F. Clauser & Associates and Anton Zeilinger of the University of Vienna for their pathfinding work in quantum ...
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Phys.Org
American physicist John Clauser won the 2022 Nobel Prize for a groundbreaking experiment vindicating quantum mechanics—a fundamental theory governing the subatomic world that is today the foundation for an emerging class of ultra-powerful computers.
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Phys.Org
New Nobel laureate Anton Zeilinger in front of a famous picture of Albert Einstein sticking out his tongue. This year's physics Nobel prize was awarded Tuesday to three men for their work on a phenomenon ...
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EarthSky
Oceanographers at the University of Michigan said on October 4, 2022, that the asteroid that struck Earth and wiped out the dinosaurs – 66 million years ago – also triggered a vast, global tsunami. The great wave started out as more than a mile (1.6 ...
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Smithsonian
Roughly 100 million years after the Big Bang, the first stars in the universe were born. But all of these first-generation stars likely burned out long ago in massive explosions, writes Gizmodo's Isaac Schultz. As a result, astronomers have never observed ...
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Gizmodo
SpaceX is moving ahead with plans to upgrade a launch pad at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, which will serve as a backup to the Kennedy Space Center pad the company currently uses to launch cargo and crews to space.
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Chicago Tribune
Frenchman Alain Aspect, American John F. Clauser and Austrian Anton Zeilinger were cited by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences for experiments proving the "totally crazy" field of quantum entanglements to be all too real.
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