Saturday, May 27, 2023

Google Alert - Science

Google
Science
Daily update May 27, 2023
NEWS
Spaceflight Now
The last two spacecraft in a four-satellite constellation of tropical cyclone research platforms took off late Thursday from New Zealand on a Rocket Lab Electron launcher, helping ensure NASA's TROPICS mission is ready for observations in time for the ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
The lunar face will be half-lit by the light of the sun tonight during a phase called the first quarter moon. Comments (0). the half-lit moon in the night sky. Picture of the moon in its first quarter phase seen on November 30, 2022.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Space.com
If you've ever wished you had X-ray vision, NASA has some photos for you. NASA has released four composite images using data from several of its most advanced telescopes to depict our universe in different wavelengths of light, including data collected ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The New York Times
A software glitch caused a Japanese robotic spacecraft to misjudge its altitude as it attempted to land on the moon last month leading to its crash, an investigation has revealed. Ispace of Japan said in a news conference on Friday that it had finished ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
The Washington Post
As other species disappeared during Earth's most extreme known extinction event 252 million years ago, one species of saber-toothed apex predator went on an epic journey, recent research suggests. New fossil evidence shows that the animals migrated ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
The study—Mass Loss of Glaciers and Ice Caps Across Greenland Since the Little Ice Age—published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, said Greenland's glaciers have lost at least 587 km3 of ice over the last century, accounting for 1.38 millimeters ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
As the world population continues to grow, scientists are seeking ways to feed them. One such effort is focused on increasing yields of existing crops by reducing losses due to organisms that eat or parasitize them, such as nematodes.
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
About 250 trillion metric tons of salty, oxygen-rich, and dense water sinks near Antarctica each year. This is known as Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW). The process of sinking drives a global network of currents. Newly formed AABW fills up to 40% of the ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Phys.Org
The storm trackers, sent into orbit on a rocket built by US company Rocket Lab and launched from New Zealand's Mahia Peninsula early Friday, completed the TROPICS constellation of shoebox-sized satellites. They can fly ...
Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Livescience.com
By targeting a single gene, scientists successfully turned chickens' feet from scaly to feathery. Comments (0). Two chicken feet, one with feathers and one with scales. A transient change in expression of the sonic hedgehog gene (Shh) can produce a ...
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