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Climate-driven heating of seawater is causing a slowdown of deep circulation patterns in the Atlantic and Southern oceans, according to Earth system scientists at the University of California, Irvine, and if this process continues, the ocean's ability to remo…
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(WGHP) — Stargazers have the chance to possibly see an astronomically rare event next week. Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) will pass by the Earth next month. The comet, first discovered in March 2022 by researchers in California, has a green glow and a full orbit of a…
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The space agency is working on getting two cosmonauts and an astronaut back home after their spacecraft sprung a leak.
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This shooting star show, the last big one for a few months, did not disappoint.
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See views inside and outside of the Tiangong space station captured on New Year's Day 2023. Chinese astronauts open New Year's presents, exercise and more.Cr...
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PARIS: The rate of ground-breaking scientific discoveries and technological innovation is slowing down despite an ever-growing amount of knowledge, according to an analysis released on Wednesday (Jan 4) of millions of research papers and patents. While previo…
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Researchers have found a way to create much stronger interactions between photons and electrons, in the process producing a hundredfold increase in the emission of light from a phenomenon called Smith-Purcell radiation. The finding has potential implications …
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Chemists from Rice University and the University of Texas at Austin discovered more isn't always better when it comes to packing charge-acceptor molecules on the surface of semiconducting nanocrystals.
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Get excited, space enthusiasts. A long-period comet discovered in March 2022 has recently brightened in the night sky, just in...
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It's been a year since the Webb Space Telescope was launched, and the detailed images it has delivered have been breathtaking. Although the telescope was 14 years behind schedule and vastly over-budget, it has proved itself to be well worth the wait. @DW
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With a new analysis of long-term climate data, researchers say they now have a much better understanding of how climate change can impact and cause sea water temperatures on one side of the Indian Ocean to be so much warmer or cooler than the temperatures on …
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A fungus has become more deadly thanks to jumping genes • Earth.com
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Researchers analysed data from 45 million papers and 4 million patents over six decades, finding less disruption and more consolidation
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Quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs; also known as quasi-periodic oscillations, i.e., QPOs) are electromagnetic emission phenomena that vary quasi-periodically with time. They appear in celestial transient events with different temporal/spatial scales, such as st…
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The rate of ground-breaking scientific discoveries and technological innovation is slowing down despite an ever-growing amount of knowledge, according to an analysis released Wednesday of millions of research papers and patents.
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All of the previously known CRISPR immune systems protect bacteria by deactivating genes from an invading virus. Now, a recently discovered CRISPR protein, called Cas12a2, has been found to act as a kind of multi-purpose self-destruct system for bacteria, cap…
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South Korea's first moon mission is beaming back images of home from its position in low lunar orbit.
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Researchers have created a map of oceanic "dead zones" that existed during the Pliocene epoch, when the Earth's climate was two to three degrees warmer than it is now. The work could provide a glimpse into the locations and potential impacts of future low oxy…
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The images and videos will be "used to select potential sites for a moon landing in 2032."
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Astronaut who took part in America’s first successful manned Apollo space mission in 1968
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Catalysts boost chemical reactions from our bodies to the industrial production of compounds and controlled fuel combustion in the car. From solid to gaseous, n
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In giant clusters of hundreds or thousands of galaxies, innumerable stars wander among the galaxies like lost souls, emitting a ghostly haze of light. These stars are not gravitationally tied to any one galaxy in a cluster.
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NASA Chief Says China Could Claim the Moon , if It Beats the US to Its Surface. NASA Administrator Bill Nelson gave an interview with Politico that was published on Jan. 1. He said that China's military aggression in the South China Sea could allude to the fu…
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UPI delivers the latest headlines from around the world: Top News, Entertainment, Health, Business, Science and Sports News - United Press International
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