Science and Technology Thread
Science and Technology Thread
Two billion years? Earth will probably be a boiling hot Venus by then.
The sun will destroy Earth a lot sooner than you might think
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/scie ... 67506.html
The sun will destroy Earth a lot sooner than you might think
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/scie ... 67506.html
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Science and Technology Thread
Man.... I love astronomy. I can't wait to visit the Southern Hemisphere to view the LMC, SMC, etc. Even seeing Canopus just above the horizon from Orlando was a thrill. But then again, I'm a dork
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Science and Technology Thread
You're a whale's penis alright.
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Science and Technology Thread
Happy International Day of Women and Girls in Science, @obhave
Science and Technology Thread
I had no idea this was a thing!Happy International Day of Women and Girls in Science, @obhave
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Science and Technology Thread
First ever air-to-air schlieren photographs of jets flying at supersonic speed, showing their shock collars and wave interactions.
Absolutely spectacular first-ever air-to-air images of supersonic jets' shockwaves interacting
Absolutely spectacular first-ever air-to-air images of supersonic jets' shockwaves interacting
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Science and Technology Thread
Curing cancer or synthetic organs? Which comes first?
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Science and Technology Thread
Synthetic organs are already here, so...
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Science and Technology Thread
Synthetic organs are already here, so...
Ok good. No need to worry about cancer then.
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Science and Technology Thread
WHAT HAVE I DONE
Science and Technology Thread
Today marks the 50th anniversary of the launch of Apollo 10, the 'dress rehearsal' for the 11 moonshot.
Science and Technology Thread
The consequences of waking up suddenly, and too early, include sleep inertia and social jetlag.
https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-o ... type=owned
https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-o ... type=owned
Science and Technology Thread
A dam good series of dam videos:
Science and Technology Thread
This is fascinating. Canine transmissible venereal tumor (CTVT) is a form of sexually-transmitted cancer in dogs that dates back somewhere around 6,000 years and could plausibly be considered a separate life form.
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/arc ... es/595246/
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/arc ... es/595246/
Science and Technology Thread
Television is awesome!
Early Childhood Education by Television: Lessons from Sesame Street
Melissa S. Kearney
Phillip B. Levine
Abstract
We investigate whether preschool-age children exposed to Sesame Street when it aired in 1969 experienced improved educational and labor market outcomes. We exploit geographic variation in broadcast reception derived from technological factors, namely UHF versus VHF transmission. This variation is then related to Census data on grade-for-age status, educational attainment, and labor market outcomes. The results indicate that Sesame Street improved school performance, particularly for boys. The point estimates for long-term educational and labor market outcomes are generally imprecise.
Citation
Kearney, Melissa S., and Phillip B. Levine. 2019. "Early Childhood Education by Television: Lessons from Sesame Street." American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 11 (1): 318-50.
Early Childhood Education by Television: Lessons from Sesame Street
Melissa S. Kearney
Phillip B. Levine
Abstract
We investigate whether preschool-age children exposed to Sesame Street when it aired in 1969 experienced improved educational and labor market outcomes. We exploit geographic variation in broadcast reception derived from technological factors, namely UHF versus VHF transmission. This variation is then related to Census data on grade-for-age status, educational attainment, and labor market outcomes. The results indicate that Sesame Street improved school performance, particularly for boys. The point estimates for long-term educational and labor market outcomes are generally imprecise.
Citation
Kearney, Melissa S., and Phillip B. Levine. 2019. "Early Childhood Education by Television: Lessons from Sesame Street." American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 11 (1): 318-50.
Science and Technology Thread
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech ... worts.html
Scientists were able to trace the path taken by Ötzi the Iceman before he died based on his clothes and the contents of his stomach.
Scientists were able to trace the path taken by Ötzi the Iceman before he died based on his clothes and the contents of his stomach.
Science and Technology Thread
So when do we start terraforming?
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Science and Technology Thread
Science is pretty damn amazing.
Science and Technology Thread
Science has figured out a way to decrease entropy at the molecular level:
https://www.livescience.com/amp/laser-f ... atter.html
https://www.livescience.com/amp/laser-f ... atter.html
Science and Technology Thread
NASA weighs in: Meteor over St. Louis was a basketball-sized piece of asteroid
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/met ... b75b4.html
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/met ... b75b4.html
What thousands saw about 8:51 p.m. Monday was a basketball-size hunk of rock that broke off an asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter before entering Earth’s atmosphere as a meteor, Bill Cooke, of the NASA Meteoroid Environments Office in Huntsville, Alabama, said Tuesday.
NASA experts used hundreds of eyewitness accounts from as far away as South Dakota and Minnesota along with two videos to calculate surprisingly precise details about the meteor: The approximately 220-pound rock traveled through the sky at 33,500 mph, faster than the speed of sound, causing the sonic boom. A NASA weather satellite helped the agency confirm it was brighter than Venus in the sky, making it a fireball.
Two videos, a standing shot of the Gateway Arch and another taken at the Missouri Skies observatory in Albany, Missouri, helped the NASA team track the meteor’s trajectory and path. It first appeared at an altitude of 59 miles above the town of Cedar Hill, southwest of St. Louis in Jefferson County, and continued for about 70 miles before breaking into pieces 12 miles above the ground, Cooke said.
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