Friday, November 11, 2022

Google Alert - Science

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Daily update November 11, 2022
NEWS
The New York Times
"I would say that would be inaccurate," Neil Cheatwood, principal investigator for the Low-Earth Orbit Flight Test of an Inflatable Decelerator, or LOFTID for short, said of the comparison during an interview.
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Smithsonian
Some female cichlids counter the stress of protecting their offspring by munching on them, study suggests. Will Sullivan. November 10, 2022 2:30 p.m.. A side view of an Astatotilapia burtoni fish in an aquarium with a barcode attached to ...
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CNET
While the Taurids are known for traveling relatively slowly as they burn up in the atmosphere and producing a number of fireballs (especially this year), the Leonids are considered a swift shower, producing fast, bright shooting stars.
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U.S. News & World Report
(Reuters) - NASA's new $4 billion moon rocket endured fierce winds and heavy rains early Thursday as it rode out Hurricane Nicole on its Florida launchpad, apparently with only minor damage, according to an early NASA inspection in the storm's aftermath.
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Physics
November 10, 2022 • Physics 15, 170. Simulations of the plasma around a black hole indicate that "magnetic reconnection" could induce radio-wave hot spots that orbit the black hole, a prediction future Event Horizon Telescope measurements could test.
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Big Island Now
On Wednesday night, a new planet-hunting instrument at the W. M. Keck Observatory on Maunakea achieved "first light," capturing its first data from the sky, a spectrum of the planet Jupiter. When ...
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SpaceNews
WASHINGTON — The Air Force Research Laboratory awarded a $72 million contract to Advanced Space to develop an experimental spacecraft to monitor deep space, far beyond Earth's orbit. The experiment, led by AFRL's Space Vehicles Directorate, ...
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Ars Technica
Over the last few decades, we've gotten much better at observing supernovae as they're happening. Orbiting telescopes can now pick up the high-energy photons emitted and figure out their source, allowing other telescopes to make rapid observations.
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Phys.Org
If space is the final frontier, it's food that will get us there in good shape, and UBC researchers are making sure that our food will be up to the task. Dr. John Frostad, an assistant professor in chemical and biological engineering who studies the ...
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ScienceAlert
An illustration of a galactic wormhole. ... Everything in the Universe has gravity – and feels it too. Yet this most common of all fundamental forces is also the one that presents the biggest challenges to physicists.
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