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oizq An Unusually Close Look At The Development Of Facebook Home
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Txyi Beautifully Depressing Ice Bucket Constantly Reminds You Of the Consequences Of Global Warming
Nothing breaks the ice like a good joke, right Sadly, that isn ;t the case with scientific papers, as those with the funniest titles get swept aside in favor of dry, technical titles. When did science become so <a href=https://www.stanley-tumbler.us>stanley website hopelessly square This strange finding comes from a 2008 study by the Israel Institute of Technology in the Journal of Information Science. In what really has to be their most meta post ever, NCBI ROFL has dug up this research. Here what original researchers Itay Sagi and Eldad Yechiam discovered: The present study examines whether the use of humor in scientific article titles is associated with the number of citations an article receives. Four judges rated the degree of amusement and pleasantness of titles of articles published over 10 years from 1985 to 1994 in two of the most prestigious journals in psychology, Psychological Bulletin and Psychological Review. We then examined the association between the levels of amusement and pleasantness and the article monthly citation average. I can ;t stanley thermos mug imagine a more rigorously scientific way of establishing whether something is funny or not than putting together stanley ca a panel of four judges. Admittedly, I also can ;t imagine a less scientific way of doing it, if only because of the whole comedy is subjective thing. Still, the researchers are about to mention something about standard deviations, so I think this is all on the level: The results show that, while the pleasantness ratin Vwcg Stay As Warm As a Wookiee In This Hoodie
This map shows where cyclones are most likely to hit, given current shifts in climate. And now a group of researchers are saying that it also shows where land mammals are most likely to go extinct as weather conditions worsen. Led by Zoological Society of London researcher Eric Ameca y Ju谩rez, the group analyzed 5,760 mammal species that live on land to evaluate which of them <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley kubek was most likely to be wiped out as Earth weather changes in the coming centuries. Worse even than stanley cup exposure to cyclones will be exposure to drought, as you can see in the above map. Three times as many mammals in danger from droughts as from cyclones, though few animals are in danger of exposure to both. Most of the drought-threatened animals are in Africa south of the Sahara; while most cyclone threats are to animals in Madagascar. To draw their conc stanley fr lusions, researchers analyzed which animals live primarily in these cyclone and drought zones to see which endangered and non-endangered species would likely suffer reductions in numbers and even extinction if weather trends continue. Write the researchers in Conservation Letters this week: We defined 8220 ignificant exposure as an overlap of at least 25% between a species ; extant geographic range and areas impacted by cyclones or droughts. Similarly we defined high exposure when such a species鈥?range overlap with areas impacted by either cyclones or droughts was equal or greater than 75% . . . It follows that the gre
Nothing breaks the ice like a good joke, right Sadly, that isn ;t the case with scientific papers, as those with the funniest titles get swept aside in favor of dry, technical titles. When did science become so <a href=https://www.stanley-tumbler.us>stanley website hopelessly square This strange finding comes from a 2008 study by the Israel Institute of Technology in the Journal of Information Science. In what really has to be their most meta post ever, NCBI ROFL has dug up this research. Here what original researchers Itay Sagi and Eldad Yechiam discovered: The present study examines whether the use of humor in scientific article titles is associated with the number of citations an article receives. Four judges rated the degree of amusement and pleasantness of titles of articles published over 10 years from 1985 to 1994 in two of the most prestigious journals in psychology, Psychological Bulletin and Psychological Review. We then examined the association between the levels of amusement and pleasantness and the article monthly citation average. I can ;t stanley thermos mug imagine a more rigorously scientific way of establishing whether something is funny or not than putting together stanley ca a panel of four judges. Admittedly, I also can ;t imagine a less scientific way of doing it, if only because of the whole comedy is subjective thing. Still, the researchers are about to mention something about standard deviations, so I think this is all on the level: The results show that, while the pleasantness ratin Vwcg Stay As Warm As a Wookiee In This Hoodie
This map shows where cyclones are most likely to hit, given current shifts in climate. And now a group of researchers are saying that it also shows where land mammals are most likely to go extinct as weather conditions worsen. Led by Zoological Society of London researcher Eric Ameca y Ju谩rez, the group analyzed 5,760 mammal species that live on land to evaluate which of them <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley kubek was most likely to be wiped out as Earth weather changes in the coming centuries. Worse even than stanley cup exposure to cyclones will be exposure to drought, as you can see in the above map. Three times as many mammals in danger from droughts as from cyclones, though few animals are in danger of exposure to both. Most of the drought-threatened animals are in Africa south of the Sahara; while most cyclone threats are to animals in Madagascar. To draw their conc stanley fr lusions, researchers analyzed which animals live primarily in these cyclone and drought zones to see which endangered and non-endangered species would likely suffer reductions in numbers and even extinction if weather trends continue. Write the researchers in Conservation Letters this week: We defined 8220 ignificant exposure as an overlap of at least 25% between a species ; extant geographic range and areas impacted by cyclones or droughts. Similarly we defined high exposure when such a species鈥?range overlap with areas impacted by either cyclones or droughts was equal or greater than 75% . . . It follows that the gre
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The treasure was kept mostly in two wooden chests, and locked away in a bank vault: t <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cupe housands of coins, jewelry and figurines, some around 2,600 years old. For decades it sat in the bank, unattended despite the historical and monetary value. Then, as a popular uprising erupted around the downtown bank last winter, someone entered the vault and made off with the trove. Now, as Interpol searches for the collection on the illegal antiquities markets, questions are still being raised about the nature of the theft. One thing most seem to agree on: The heist was an inside job. I cannot say who did it, said Ahmed Buzaian, an archaeology professor at Benghazi University, who was part of an outside group that investigated the crime scene. But they knew exactly what was inside. What happened, according to the official story, strikes of Harry Houdini meets Ocean Eleven. At some point in late March only a month after rebels in Benghazi had evicted the forces of Col. Muammar Qaddafi and not long after NATO began airstri stanley cup kes in support of the rebels a group of thieves broke into the National Commercial Bank of Benghazi, likely from the adjacent building that housed the secret police and that protesters tor stanley flask ched at the beginning of the revolution. Once inside the bank lobby, said Osama El-Ketaf, head of the bank legal office, they drilled directly into the vault through a little more than two feet of steel-reinforced concrete. Th Tpjy Ruby Sparks = Weird Science For Hipsters
W <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley cup hen buildings grow past their prime, they usually reach their demolition fate鈥攁 cobbled, dusty mess鈥攖hrough dynamite explosion. It a crashing spectacle of destruction. Loud, angry and ruthless. But maybe it doesn ;t have to be like that. Maybe it can be subtle, quite and peaceful. Maybe it can be a strategic floor-by-floor demoltion like the skyscraper in the video above. Don ;t blink. Cause you might miss a floor going bye bye. Having a building go floor by floor looks a lot like you ;re clearing line after line after line in Tetris. Or if Mario mushroom ran out and he shrank back down to super small mario. It almost looks like the building is being photoshopped smaller, pixel by pixel. But it all happening in real life. Tasei stanley cup stanley nz Corporation, a Japanese construction company, is using a new and clever method to demolish a building. No more wrecking balls or explosions that leave a mess, instead, Tasei is taking the building apart from the inside. A crane is inside the building and lowers materials from each floor down. The crane actually generates electricity to power other equipment used in the teardown of the building so not only is the demolition clean, it green. As everything is removed from each floor, the temporary jacks and columns holding up a floor are lowered鈥攚hich makes it look like the building is shrinking. This method reduces carbon emissions by 85%, dust levels by 90% and noise by 17-23 decibels. Plus, it looks mind-
The treasure was kept mostly in two wooden chests, and locked away in a bank vault: t <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cupe housands of coins, jewelry and figurines, some around 2,600 years old. For decades it sat in the bank, unattended despite the historical and monetary value. Then, as a popular uprising erupted around the downtown bank last winter, someone entered the vault and made off with the trove. Now, as Interpol searches for the collection on the illegal antiquities markets, questions are still being raised about the nature of the theft. One thing most seem to agree on: The heist was an inside job. I cannot say who did it, said Ahmed Buzaian, an archaeology professor at Benghazi University, who was part of an outside group that investigated the crime scene. But they knew exactly what was inside. What happened, according to the official story, strikes of Harry Houdini meets Ocean Eleven. At some point in late March only a month after rebels in Benghazi had evicted the forces of Col. Muammar Qaddafi and not long after NATO began airstri stanley cup kes in support of the rebels a group of thieves broke into the National Commercial Bank of Benghazi, likely from the adjacent building that housed the secret police and that protesters tor stanley flask ched at the beginning of the revolution. Once inside the bank lobby, said Osama El-Ketaf, head of the bank legal office, they drilled directly into the vault through a little more than two feet of steel-reinforced concrete. Th Tpjy Ruby Sparks = Weird Science For Hipsters
W <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley cup hen buildings grow past their prime, they usually reach their demolition fate鈥攁 cobbled, dusty mess鈥攖hrough dynamite explosion. It a crashing spectacle of destruction. Loud, angry and ruthless. But maybe it doesn ;t have to be like that. Maybe it can be subtle, quite and peaceful. Maybe it can be a strategic floor-by-floor demoltion like the skyscraper in the video above. Don ;t blink. Cause you might miss a floor going bye bye. Having a building go floor by floor looks a lot like you ;re clearing line after line after line in Tetris. Or if Mario mushroom ran out and he shrank back down to super small mario. It almost looks like the building is being photoshopped smaller, pixel by pixel. But it all happening in real life. Tasei stanley cup stanley nz Corporation, a Japanese construction company, is using a new and clever method to demolish a building. No more wrecking balls or explosions that leave a mess, instead, Tasei is taking the building apart from the inside. A crane is inside the building and lowers materials from each floor down. The crane actually generates electricity to power other equipment used in the teardown of the building so not only is the demolition clean, it green. As everything is removed from each floor, the temporary jacks and columns holding up a floor are lowered鈥攚hich makes it look like the building is shrinking. This method reduces carbon emissions by 85%, dust levels by 90% and noise by 17-23 decibels. Plus, it looks mind-
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Another triumph for Once Upon a Time last night. Can we just stop spending the budget on silly fairy crap, and keep focusing on better writing For the first time in two years, Once did something we ;ve always wanted to see on screen: <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.cz>stanley cup Demonstrate how broken the fairytale mindset of good vs. evil truly is. Spoilers ahead 8230; Instead of focusing on another flashback about an stanley cup other pointless fairy creature, Once showed what happ stanley italia ened when the curse first started. It. Was. Brilliant. Regina was brilliant. Every day, Past Reg wakes up a Grinch smile, looking over everyone misery. But eventually, she gets bored. Not surprising 鈥?I can ;t imagine how long that sort of Groundhog Day cycle would entertain you, especially if your only highlight is your special chair at Granny Diner. Anyway, Regina gets bored pretty quickly too 鈥?we ;re talking like one week into the curse, she already kind of dunzo with the whole shebang . Enter two real-world people, a father and his son 鈥?who also fill the mandatory Once rule of introducing a new parental figure in each episode. The couple wander into Storybrooke, and Regina starts acting all Evil Queen around humans. It delightful. The little boy charms her heart, and she decides she wants him, so she tries to take him. His father, naturally, flips shit. Regina inability to understand or even care about what right on Earth and the insane conflict it creates not necessari Cojz This beetle larva tricks its predator into becoming prey
You may have heard, from the internet or from someone making idle conversation at a cocktail party, that mushrooms are more like humans than they are like plants. What does that even mean We ;ll work it out for you. Occasionally, when people assert scientific facts in everyday life, I get annoyed. A prime example is when people talk about how strawberries, blackberries, and raspberries aren ;t really berries, since berries have their seeds on the inside and strawberries line themselves with their seeds. As far as I ;m concerned, the word 8220 trawberry comes down from Old English a thousand years ago, and was pronounced berry by the 1400s, while the Linnaean System of classification has only been around since the seventeen hundreds. If there a etymological problem, it up to Linnaeans to figure out a berry definition that <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup includes the most commonly-known berries, or if the don ;t, to come up with a new word entir stanley thermosflasche ely. If they don ;t care to, at least they can keep their technicalities away from my brain, instead of deciding that they get to re-classify all berries. I got the same impression when I started hearing that mushrooms were closer to humans than they were to plants. Obviously, beha stanley vaso viorally, they aren ;t. They don ;t move. They don ;t reproduce sexually. They don ;t squeak when you poke them. This is why they, up until recently, were pushed over to the plant side of most compendia
Another triumph for Once Upon a Time last night. Can we just stop spending the budget on silly fairy crap, and keep focusing on better writing For the first time in two years, Once did something we ;ve always wanted to see on screen: <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.cz>stanley cup Demonstrate how broken the fairytale mindset of good vs. evil truly is. Spoilers ahead 8230; Instead of focusing on another flashback about an stanley cup other pointless fairy creature, Once showed what happ stanley italia ened when the curse first started. It. Was. Brilliant. Regina was brilliant. Every day, Past Reg wakes up a Grinch smile, looking over everyone misery. But eventually, she gets bored. Not surprising 鈥?I can ;t imagine how long that sort of Groundhog Day cycle would entertain you, especially if your only highlight is your special chair at Granny Diner. Anyway, Regina gets bored pretty quickly too 鈥?we ;re talking like one week into the curse, she already kind of dunzo with the whole shebang . Enter two real-world people, a father and his son 鈥?who also fill the mandatory Once rule of introducing a new parental figure in each episode. The couple wander into Storybrooke, and Regina starts acting all Evil Queen around humans. It delightful. The little boy charms her heart, and she decides she wants him, so she tries to take him. His father, naturally, flips shit. Regina inability to understand or even care about what right on Earth and the insane conflict it creates not necessari Cojz This beetle larva tricks its predator into becoming prey
You may have heard, from the internet or from someone making idle conversation at a cocktail party, that mushrooms are more like humans than they are like plants. What does that even mean We ;ll work it out for you. Occasionally, when people assert scientific facts in everyday life, I get annoyed. A prime example is when people talk about how strawberries, blackberries, and raspberries aren ;t really berries, since berries have their seeds on the inside and strawberries line themselves with their seeds. As far as I ;m concerned, the word 8220 trawberry comes down from Old English a thousand years ago, and was pronounced berry by the 1400s, while the Linnaean System of classification has only been around since the seventeen hundreds. If there a etymological problem, it up to Linnaeans to figure out a berry definition that <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup includes the most commonly-known berries, or if the don ;t, to come up with a new word entir stanley thermosflasche ely. If they don ;t care to, at least they can keep their technicalities away from my brain, instead of deciding that they get to re-classify all berries. I got the same impression when I started hearing that mushrooms were closer to humans than they were to plants. Obviously, beha stanley vaso viorally, they aren ;t. They don ;t move. They don ;t reproduce sexually. They don ;t squeak when you poke them. This is why they, up until recently, were pushed over to the plant side of most compendia
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Evidence of Mars ; watery past continues to pile up, but details surrounding the extent and duration of the planet hydrous history remain muddled 鈥?just how wet was Mars, really https://gizmodo/nasa-claims-to-have-found-bullet-proof-evidence-of-ma-5866195 https://gizmodo/evidence-is-piling-up-for-water-flowing-on-the-surface-5896293 Previous theories have held that the planet mysterious northern lowlands, pictured above in blue, once hosted oceans, but the latest climate models reveal that Mars was likely too cold and dry to support such a large body of water. https://gizmodo/10-unsolved-marti stanley thermos an-mysteries-5862878 We ;ve visited the surface of Mars no fewer than half a dozen times since the 1970s, and on every occasion we ;ve encountered a frigid, arid climate. But numerous observations have led scientists to the conclusion that conditions were not always so inhospitable to moisture. Intricate, winding valleys, reminiscent of dried-up river beds, have been found branched across the planet surface; and clays and mineral deposits 鈥?traces many astrogeologists claim could only have formed through hundreds of years of exposure to water 鈥?have provided what researchers recently called bullet proof evidence 8221 stanley polska ; of stanley canada Mars ; warm, watery past. https://gizmodo/these-are-the-remains-of-an-ancient-river-on-mars-5837206 Findings like these have made the idea of an ancient Martian ocean seem more and more plausible in recent years. B Jiwa Carl Sagan s Cosmos Sequel Coming from Seth MacFarlane
iTunes Match is finally here, although it looks like your months-long wait might be extended a bit. Turns out that <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.at>stanley thermoskannen due to excessive demand, Apple i stanley tumblers s temporarily blocking new registrations. https://gizmodo/itunes-match-is-live-at-long-last-5859316 When we tried to sign up for iTunes Match we were prompted with the error above, informing us that new iTunes Match subscriptions are temporarily unavailable due to excessive demand, and that we should please try again in an hour. Blast! We ;ll keep trying, but in the mean time would you all please stop We ;r stanley cup becher e dying to get in! ITunesMusic
Evidence of Mars ; watery past continues to pile up, but details surrounding the extent and duration of the planet hydrous history remain muddled 鈥?just how wet was Mars, really https://gizmodo/nasa-claims-to-have-found-bullet-proof-evidence-of-ma-5866195 https://gizmodo/evidence-is-piling-up-for-water-flowing-on-the-surface-5896293 Previous theories have held that the planet mysterious northern lowlands, pictured above in blue, once hosted oceans, but the latest climate models reveal that Mars was likely too cold and dry to support such a large body of water. https://gizmodo/10-unsolved-marti stanley thermos an-mysteries-5862878 We ;ve visited the surface of Mars no fewer than half a dozen times since the 1970s, and on every occasion we ;ve encountered a frigid, arid climate. But numerous observations have led scientists to the conclusion that conditions were not always so inhospitable to moisture. Intricate, winding valleys, reminiscent of dried-up river beds, have been found branched across the planet surface; and clays and mineral deposits 鈥?traces many astrogeologists claim could only have formed through hundreds of years of exposure to water 鈥?have provided what researchers recently called bullet proof evidence 8221 stanley polska ; of stanley canada Mars ; warm, watery past. https://gizmodo/these-are-the-remains-of-an-ancient-river-on-mars-5837206 Findings like these have made the idea of an ancient Martian ocean seem more and more plausible in recent years. B Jiwa Carl Sagan s Cosmos Sequel Coming from Seth MacFarlane
iTunes Match is finally here, although it looks like your months-long wait might be extended a bit. Turns out that <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.at>stanley thermoskannen due to excessive demand, Apple i stanley tumblers s temporarily blocking new registrations. https://gizmodo/itunes-match-is-live-at-long-last-5859316 When we tried to sign up for iTunes Match we were prompted with the error above, informing us that new iTunes Match subscriptions are temporarily unavailable due to excessive demand, and that we should please try again in an hour. Blast! We ;ll keep trying, but in the mean time would you all please stop We ;r stanley cup becher e dying to get in!
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Migrating thousands of miles every year requires insane amounts of energy. But that still nothing compared to the amount of water birds need to remain hydrated 8230; and the drastic steps birds take to find all that water. Birds will stay in the air for days on end without stopping for food or water. To survive these insane treks, we might guess <a href=https://www.stanleycup.lt>stanley cup that birds build up unusually powerful muscles in the run-up to their migration, or perhaps they store lots of fat reserves so that they can burn it all for energy later. But the truth is far stranger 鈥?and it only now that we know for stanley flasche sure just what these birds do. Biologists at the University of Western Ontario placed a bunch of tiny songbirds in a wind tunnel and then had them fly without breaks for several hours, long enough that their bodies started acting as though they would on a migration. They found that the birds were burning off parts of their own muscles and organs to keep flying. On any number of levels, that doesn ;t seem to make sense after all, birds don ;t need fat in the same way that they need their musc stanley usa les and organs, which are kind of essential to the whole 8220 taying alive thing, let alone staying thousands of feet in the air during a migratory flight. But it more than that. There a very good reason why, in the normal course of things, animals burn off their fat: it releases way more energy that can be extracted from the protein in muscle. There 8 Daqy Shooting Challenge: Perfect Symmetry
Homo floresiensis likely stood about 3 ;6 8243;, making this prehistoric human roughly the average height of one of J.R.R. Tolkien Hobbits. For years, Flores Man has been referred to by the nic <a href=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk>stanley cups uk kname hobbit, contributing to the species ; popularity. But one company that owns film rights in The Hobbit has decided that the archaeologists who discovered Homo floresiensis cannot refer to the ancient human by that name. The Guardian reports that Dr Brent Alloway, associate professor at Victoria University, is planning a free lecture on Homo floresiensis by Mike Morwood and Thomas Sutikna, two of the archaeologists who discovered the species. But when Alloway approached the Saul Zaentz Company/Middle-earth Enterprises, which owns rights in the film, for permission to title the lecture, The Other Hobbit, their lawyer responded that it is not possible for our client to allow generic use of the trade mark HOBBIT. The Tolkien Estate, which owns registered trademarks on the word Hobbit in seve stanley cups ral co stanley cups mpanies, was not approached. On the one hand, I can see a company that has a trademark interest in the word hobbit worrying about that word becoming generic. And Alloway acknowledges that he organized the lecture specifically to coincide with the release of The Hobbit film and capitalize on the name. But Alloway and his fellow scientists are clearly using the word in a different market-scientific, rath
Migrating thousands of miles every year requires insane amounts of energy. But that still nothing compared to the amount of water birds need to remain hydrated 8230; and the drastic steps birds take to find all that water. Birds will stay in the air for days on end without stopping for food or water. To survive these insane treks, we might guess <a href=https://www.stanleycup.lt>stanley cup that birds build up unusually powerful muscles in the run-up to their migration, or perhaps they store lots of fat reserves so that they can burn it all for energy later. But the truth is far stranger 鈥?and it only now that we know for stanley flasche sure just what these birds do. Biologists at the University of Western Ontario placed a bunch of tiny songbirds in a wind tunnel and then had them fly without breaks for several hours, long enough that their bodies started acting as though they would on a migration. They found that the birds were burning off parts of their own muscles and organs to keep flying. On any number of levels, that doesn ;t seem to make sense after all, birds don ;t need fat in the same way that they need their musc stanley usa les and organs, which are kind of essential to the whole 8220 taying alive thing, let alone staying thousands of feet in the air during a migratory flight. But it more than that. There a very good reason why, in the normal course of things, animals burn off their fat: it releases way more energy that can be extracted from the protein in muscle. There 8 Daqy Shooting Challenge: Perfect Symmetry
Homo floresiensis likely stood about 3 ;6 8243;, making this prehistoric human roughly the average height of one of J.R.R. Tolkien Hobbits. For years, Flores Man has been referred to by the nic <a href=https://www.stanley-cups-uk.uk>stanley cups uk kname hobbit, contributing to the species ; popularity. But one company that owns film rights in The Hobbit has decided that the archaeologists who discovered Homo floresiensis cannot refer to the ancient human by that name. The Guardian reports that Dr Brent Alloway, associate professor at Victoria University, is planning a free lecture on Homo floresiensis by Mike Morwood and Thomas Sutikna, two of the archaeologists who discovered the species. But when Alloway approached the Saul Zaentz Company/Middle-earth Enterprises, which owns rights in the film, for permission to title the lecture, The Other Hobbit, their lawyer responded that it is not possible for our client to allow generic use of the trade mark HOBBIT. The Tolkien Estate, which owns registered trademarks on the word Hobbit in seve stanley cups ral co stanley cups mpanies, was not approached. On the one hand, I can see a company that has a trademark interest in the word hobbit worrying about that word becoming generic. And Alloway acknowledges that he organized the lecture specifically to coincide with the release of The Hobbit film and capitalize on the name. But Alloway and his fellow scientists are clearly using the word in a different market-scientific, rath
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Ex <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cup oplanet Kepler-19b orbits its star in ways that violate the laws of physics, speeding up and slowing down its orbit for no apparent reason. The only explanation is a second, hidden planet 8230;making stanley cup deutschland it the first phantom exoplanet ever found. Discovered by and named after NASA exoplanet-hunting Kepler Space Telescope, Kepler 19-b is located about 650 light-years from Earth, and it completes one orbit every nine days and seven hours, give or take. That give or take bit is the problem sometimes it will complete the orbit five minutes faster than it should, and other times it will be five minutes slow. That may not seem like much of a difference, but that amount of variance flies completely i stanley thermos n the face of the laws of planetary motion, first formulated by Johannes Kepler which is strangely appropriate, considering it his namesake that found this problem planet. The explanation for this physics-defying anomaly is the presence of a nearby companion planet. The problem is that we ;ve yet to find any direct sign of this planet, designated Kepler-19c. That makes this invisible exoplanet the first ever that is only known from its gravitational effect on another planet. Still, Kepler-19c is in good company it was the gravitational anomalies of Uranus that led to the discoveries of Neptune and, albeit somewhat unintentionally, Pluto. Since we can ;t see Kepler-19c, we don ;t have any solid idea wh Pjyw iTunes Match: The Past Disguised as the Future
3-D printers can produce gun parts, aircraft wings, food and a lot more, but this new 3-D printed product may be the craziest t <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup hing yet: human embryonic stem cells. Using stem cells as the ink in a 3-D printer, researchers in Scotland hope to eventually build 3-D printed organs and tissues. A team at Heriot-Watt University used a specially designed valve-based technique to deposit whole, live cells onto a surface in a specific pattern. This article originally appeared at Popular Science. The cells were floating in a bio-ink, to use the terminology of the researchers who developed this technique. stanley cup They were able to squeeze out tiny droplets, containing five cells or fewer per droplet, in a variety of shapes and sizes. To produce clumps of cells, the team printed out cells first and then overlaid those with cell-free bio-ink, resulting in larger droplets or spheroids of cells. The cells would group together inside these spheroids. Spheroid size is key, because stem cells need certain conditions to work properly. This is why very precisely controlled 3-D printing could be so stanley cup valuable for stem cell research. After being squeezed out of a thin valve, the cells were still alive and viable, and able to transform into any other cell in the body, the researchers say. It the first time anyone has printed human embyronic stem cells, said lead researcher Will Wenmiao Shu, a professor at Heriot-Watt. But 8230; why Eventually, they could be used to
Ex <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cup oplanet Kepler-19b orbits its star in ways that violate the laws of physics, speeding up and slowing down its orbit for no apparent reason. The only explanation is a second, hidden planet 8230;making stanley cup deutschland it the first phantom exoplanet ever found. Discovered by and named after NASA exoplanet-hunting Kepler Space Telescope, Kepler 19-b is located about 650 light-years from Earth, and it completes one orbit every nine days and seven hours, give or take. That give or take bit is the problem sometimes it will complete the orbit five minutes faster than it should, and other times it will be five minutes slow. That may not seem like much of a difference, but that amount of variance flies completely i stanley thermos n the face of the laws of planetary motion, first formulated by Johannes Kepler which is strangely appropriate, considering it his namesake that found this problem planet. The explanation for this physics-defying anomaly is the presence of a nearby companion planet. The problem is that we ;ve yet to find any direct sign of this planet, designated Kepler-19c. That makes this invisible exoplanet the first ever that is only known from its gravitational effect on another planet. Still, Kepler-19c is in good company it was the gravitational anomalies of Uranus that led to the discoveries of Neptune and, albeit somewhat unintentionally, Pluto. Since we can ;t see Kepler-19c, we don ;t have any solid idea wh Pjyw iTunes Match: The Past Disguised as the Future
3-D printers can produce gun parts, aircraft wings, food and a lot more, but this new 3-D printed product may be the craziest t <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup hing yet: human embryonic stem cells. Using stem cells as the ink in a 3-D printer, researchers in Scotland hope to eventually build 3-D printed organs and tissues. A team at Heriot-Watt University used a specially designed valve-based technique to deposit whole, live cells onto a surface in a specific pattern. This article originally appeared at Popular Science. The cells were floating in a bio-ink, to use the terminology of the researchers who developed this technique. stanley cup They were able to squeeze out tiny droplets, containing five cells or fewer per droplet, in a variety of shapes and sizes. To produce clumps of cells, the team printed out cells first and then overlaid those with cell-free bio-ink, resulting in larger droplets or spheroids of cells. The cells would group together inside these spheroids. Spheroid size is key, because stem cells need certain conditions to work properly. This is why very precisely controlled 3-D printing could be so stanley cup valuable for stem cell research. After being squeezed out of a thin valve, the cells were still alive and viable, and able to transform into any other cell in the body, the researchers say. It the first time anyone has printed human embyronic stem cells, said lead researcher Will Wenmiao Shu, a professor at Heriot-Watt. But 8230; why Eventually, they could be used to
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