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“Why We Haven’t Found Alien Life to Dangerous New Coronavirus Strain”

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 Why Haven’t We Found Alien Life Yet? Blame Our Closed Minds -

Yet why did we not get foreign life? Blame our closed minds — are we seeking life in the wrong places, wrongly? Will we be able to recognize the signs? One astronomer says that the ideas were called E.T. Most of the discoveries to date have been in the radio range, where scientists have investigated a small fraction of potential frequencies in a small fraction of potential frequencies. Surveys have been much less widespread in optical wavelengths. For any new technology, says Avie Loeb of Harvard, we must consider whether, somewhere, an alien civilization has developed it, possibly, leaving some traceable traces behind. "As our technology improves, it can help us imagine things we don't imagine before and explore things we haven't explored before."

The International Space Station Is Ailing. Its Replacement Will Shape the Future of Space Exploration- , reports singularity hub Unexpectedly, the ISS is beginning to show its age. Earlier this month, the astronauts finally fixed an air leak, which had been in operation for more than a year - and is one of the more recent maintenance-related problems facing the station.

Weird ‘gravitational molecules’ could orbit black holes like electrons swirling around atoms, Reports A team of live science researchers have shown that a particular type of particle can exist around a pair of black holes in the same way that electrons can exist around a pair of hydrogen atoms - "the first of the gravitational molecule Examples." This strange object can give us clues to the identity of dark matter and the ultimate nature of space-time

Scientists Think a Glowing Ice Moon Can Help In the Search for Alien Life - The glow of nighttime snow on Europa can be very unique and unlike any other event in our solar system, ”according to a new study, Motherboard Science reports. A team of planetary scientists has discovered that this tantalizing world can shine even in the dark, a feature that, according to a paper published in Nature on Monday, is "more accurate surface characterization and unique night time for future space probes." Can provide visualization ". Astronomy. This will allow Europa missions to learn even more about conditions on the mysterious moon, including whether it can (or does) host alien life.

“Someone is Looking Back at Us” - The Three-Hundred Million Earth-Like Worlds of the Milky Way. "One of the 200 stars has habitable Earth-like planets - in the galaxy, half a billion stars have Earth-like planets going around them - that's a huge, half-billion. So when we look at the night sky See, it makes sense that someone is watching us, ”says physicist, Michio Kaku, author of The Future of Humanity.

Pfizer covid-19 vaccine: Is it the breakthrough we’ve been hoping for? - Pfizer and its partner BioNTech say their coronavirus vaccine is 90 percent effective in Phase III trials. How excited should we be about the news, and what questions remain unanswered? The New Scientist asks.



Is a dangerous new coronavirus strain circulating in farmed mink? - The New Scientist asks. The Danish government has ordered the slaughter of all cultivated mink in the country after discovering a mutant form of coronovirus in animals. It has already spread to humans.

The intriguing maps that reveal alternate histories - BBC Future reports- if major elections, wars and events happened differently? Samuel Armsman has discovered the details and delights of the maps that make up the alternate world for our own.

The Batteries of the Future Are Weightless and Invisible - Wired — where a structural battery research is under way in the Renaissance process, which aims to build energy storage in the very devices and energy of vehicles. Unlike a conventional battery pack embedded in the chassis, these structural batteries are invisible. Electrical storage is in thin layers of composite materials that make up the car's frame. In a sense, they are as weightless as cars are batteries. "

How the Associated Press Became Part of the Nazi Propaganda Machine - New research suggests the backscratch agreement traded access to control, the Smithsonian reports.

Could Listening to the Deep Sea Help Save It? - At the abyss, everyone can hear you scream, the New York Times reports.

Old Dogs, New Research and the Secrets of Aging - The way dogs grow and age can provide potentially useful similarities with people, reports The New York Times. Poets from Homer to Pablo Neruda have taken notice. As are folk singers and storytellers. Now science is taking a turn, hoping that it will help us understand how dogs grow and age. And, like his earlier poets, scientists are finding similarities between the two species.

The Xenobot Future Is Coming—Start Planning Now We are on the verge of being able to program biological programs like we do computer programs. Wired raised some thorny questions.

In a warming world, Cape Town’s ‘Day Zero’ drought won’t be an anomaly - reports standford university .

The Brain Scientists reported that a new study of How-of-A found the strongest evidence of "time sales" in the brain, the New York Times reports. "The first thing is that, strictly speaking, there is no such thing as 'time cells' in the brain," said Gyori Buzsaki, a neuroscientist at New York University, who was not involved in the new research. "There is no neural clock. What happens in the brain changes neurons in response to other neurons. "

Image source : Daily Galaxy


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1 Comments

  1. Very Good. Same Thing Was Running In My Mind .

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