OMG science

[ follow ]
#marine-biology
OMG science
fromFuturism
14 hours ago

Scientists Intrigued by Chunk of Flesh That Refuses to Die After Several Years

Amputated Psolus fabricii tissue survived three years in natural seawater, repairing and reorganizing itself without forming a new organism.
OMG science
fromwww.dw.com
4 days ago

Scientists discover new little blue octopus in Galapagos

A tiny blue octopus, Microeledone galapagensis, was identified in Ecuador’s Galapagos at about 5,800 feet depth, expanding knowledge of deep tropical Pacific octopuses.
OMG science
fromFuturism
14 hours ago

Scientists Intrigued by Chunk of Flesh That Refuses to Die After Several Years

Amputated Psolus fabricii tissue survived three years in natural seawater, repairing and reorganizing itself without forming a new organism.
OMG science
fromwww.dw.com
4 days ago

Scientists discover new little blue octopus in Galapagos

A tiny blue octopus, Microeledone galapagensis, was identified in Ecuador’s Galapagos at about 5,800 feet depth, expanding knowledge of deep tropical Pacific octopuses.
#astronomy
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
22 hours ago

What is a blue micromoon and when is the best time to see it this weekend?

A blue micromoon occurs when a blue moon coincides with a micromoon, making the Moon slightly smaller than a typical full moon.
OMG science
fromianVisits
3 days ago

Blue Moon this Sunday won't be blue - but sometimes they really are

A calendar blue moon is a naming event, while a true blue moon can occur when volcanic ash scatters light toward blue wavelengths.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
22 hours ago

What is a blue micromoon and when is the best time to see it this weekend?

A blue micromoon occurs when a blue moon coincides with a micromoon, making the Moon slightly smaller than a typical full moon.
OMG science
fromianVisits
3 days ago

Blue Moon this Sunday won't be blue - but sometimes they really are

A calendar blue moon is a naming event, while a true blue moon can occur when volcanic ash scatters light toward blue wavelengths.
OMG science
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
1 day ago

Trump suspended UC Berkeley grants over foreign funding.' Some researchers say they didn't have any.

NSF suspended nearly $21 million in UC Berkeley research grants over alleged failure to disclose foreign funding, but several principal investigators said they received none from the named countries.
fromBig Think
1 day ago

Ask Ethan: Why does our Universe require CP-violation?

Here in our Universe, one great mystery is how, if matter and antimatter can only be created or destroyed in equal-and-opposite amounts, our Universe came to be dominated by normal (regular) matter, with barely a trace of antimatter present. Sure, dark energy (68%) and dark matter (27%) might make up the majority of the Universe, but the rest of it is made up of particles from the Standard Model: quarks, gluons, leptons, and photons. Of that 5%, nearly all of it (4.9%) is regular matter, made of protons, neutrons, and electrons, while the amount of antimatter - like antiprotons, antineutrons, or positrons - is negligible.
OMG science
fromFast Company
1 day ago

How the Library of Congress packed 250 years of U.S. history into a vial the size of a quarter

The storage technique uses artificial DNA molecules like a hard drive by converting data sequenced in 0s and 1s, the binary language of computers, into As (adenine), Cs (cytosine), Gs (guanine), and Ts (thymine), the bases that make up a DNA molecule.
OMG science
#antarctica
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Antarctica's Doomsday Glacier could lose its ice shelf this year

Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf is thinning rapidly from warm ocean water and is very likely to disintegrate sometime this year, raising sea levels if collapse follows.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Doomsday Glacier Shows Signs of Imminent Disintegration

A major Antarctic ice shelf in front of the Thwaites glacier is actively breaking apart, raising fears of a domino collapse that could accelerate sea-level rise.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Antarctica's Doomsday Glacier could lose its ice shelf this year

Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf is thinning rapidly from warm ocean water and is very likely to disintegrate sometime this year, raising sea levels if collapse follows.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Doomsday Glacier Shows Signs of Imminent Disintegration

A major Antarctic ice shelf in front of the Thwaites glacier is actively breaking apart, raising fears of a domino collapse that could accelerate sea-level rise.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Mysterious sonic boom panics thousands in several US states

A large sonic boom was recorded over Saint Andrews, South Carolina, with widespread reports across multiple states and no confirmed military jet or meteor cause.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 day ago

Scientists Rush to Save One of the World's Rarest Trees as It Literally Falls Off a Cliff

Seeds are being collected from the last wild Dendroseris neriifolia tree on a cliff to preserve a critically endangered Chilean species.
fromArs Technica
1 day ago

Severed sea cucumber appendages don't seem to die

Organs, arms, appendages, and other complex tissues usually decay rapidly when they're separated from their host. Over the years, biologists have seen some success with keeping them alive outside of the body-organ transplants depend on it-but it has always required germ-free environments and nutrient-rich mediums filled with growth factors. Now, though, scientists have discovered bits of tissue removed from a species of sea cucumber called Psolus fabricii can keep on living indefinitely if they're left in ordinary seawater.
OMG science
OMG science
fromNature
2 days ago

How common bacteria fasten their armour

Researchers identified the molecular machinery a common bacterium uses to fasten its outer membrane to its cell wall.
#tyrannosaurus-rex
OMG science
fromDefector
1 day ago

The Long, Sad, And Totally Fucked-Up Tale Of Timmy The Whale's Trip To Germany | Defector

A humpback whale beached on Anholt after repeated stranding, decomposing in shallow water and raising concerns about its fate and public response.
#animal-navigation
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago
OMG science

A new study says homing pigeon livers act like compasses. Other experts aren't so sure

Homing pigeon livers contain magnetic immune cells with iron, and removing them disrupts navigation using Earth’s magnetic field.
fromArs Technica
2 days ago
OMG science

How pigeons exploit magnetic fields for navigation

Pigeons lose homing after clodronate injections but recover under sunny conditions, indicating navigation uses sun orientation plus magnetic sensing via tissue-resident macrophages.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

A new study says homing pigeon livers act like compasses. Other experts aren't so sure

Homing pigeon livers contain magnetic immune cells with iron, and removing them disrupts navigation using Earth’s magnetic field.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
2 days ago

How pigeons exploit magnetic fields for navigation

Pigeons lose homing after clodronate injections but recover under sunny conditions, indicating navigation uses sun orientation plus magnetic sensing via tissue-resident macrophages.
OMG science
fromBig Think
2 days ago

Yes, scientists can be hostile to new ideas. So should you

New headline-grabbing physics claims often fail because they lack evidence, ignore established constraints, and offer no better explanatory or predictive power than existing theories.
#climate-change
OMG science
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

Attack of the "Flesh-Eating" Bacteria

Microbes adapt rapidly to climate change, potentially increasing human disease risks and altering ecosystems through antibiotic resistance and shifting pathogen distributions.
OMG science
fromMail Online
3 days ago

Scientists blame climate change for the UK heatwave

Climate change is making UK spring heatwaves hotter, longer, and more frequent, with temperatures reaching record levels and infrastructure unprepared.
fromwww.bbc.com
2 days ago

King's College team wins access to cutting-edge Google quantum chip

Google Scientists from King's College London have become the first UK academic research team to gain access to Google's cutting-edge quantum computer chip Willow as part of a scheme launched with the UK's national quantum lab last year. Quantum computers can in theory solve problems which the most powerful conventional computers cannot. Google says Willow can solve a theoretical problem in five minutes which would take the world's current fastest super computers 10 septillion - or 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 - years to complete.
OMG science
OMG science
fromSubstack
2 days ago

Selection Sort Made Visual: Learn Sorting Without Abstract Theory

Selection sort works by repeatedly selecting the smallest remaining item and placing it into the next sorted position until the array is fully ordered.
OMG science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

Meteor burns through the sky over erupting VOLCANO in the Philippines

A bright green meteor appeared over Mount Mayon during an eruption, but data showed it disintegrated in the atmosphere without striking the volcano.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The age of gravitational astronomy' is here

About 1.3 billion light-years away, two massive black holes had merged, and the resulting shockwavea gravitational wavewas strong enough for LIGO to detect the moment it washed over Earth. Since then gravitational-wave researchers have focused on fine-tuning their instruments to detect more of these fleeting ripples.
OMG science
OMG science
fromMail Online
2 days ago

New twist in murder of renowned scientist linked to pattern of deaths

An astrophysicist was shot dead outside his California home, and a man charged with murder and carjacking pleaded not guilty while facing possible life imprisonment.
OMG science
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson talks about his book, 'Take Me to Your Leader'

Avoid assuming alien customs or anatomy; treat first contact as unknown and potentially hazardous.
#astrobiology
OMG science
fromBig Think
3 days ago

Science's three big hopes for finding alien life

No confirmed extraterrestrial life signatures have been found despite major advances, but scientific prospects remain promising for future evidence beyond Earth.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Scientists claim aliens are out there, but we might have missed them

Extraterrestrial life may exist but remain undetected due to false negatives from limited equipment and premature assumptions about nonliving explanations.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

'Alien' material on Earth raises questions about life itself

Stromatolites in an ancient asteroid crater likely formed in hydrothermal, mineral-rich lake conditions, with extraterrestrial material traces suggesting space-linked origins for early life.
OMG science
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

America Must Not Lose the Mosquito-Laser Race

A mosquito-detecting air-defense device claims to identify and eliminate threats mid-flight using a blue-violet lightning-like discharge.
OMG science
fromNature
4 days ago

Meet the biologists deciphering marine-mammal histories from baleen, whiskers and tusks

Baleen plates provide time-stamped hormone and stress information for right whales when blood sampling is impractical.
OMG science
fromNew York Post
3 days ago

Unique phenomenon causing Jersey Shore beaches to resemble tropical waters

Bright turquoise-blue ocean color along the Mid-Atlantic coast results from phytoplankton blooms intensified by spring sunlight, nutrient-rich waters, and seasonal upwelling.
#marine-biodiversity
fromColossal
3 days ago
OMG science

In a Single Year, Ocean Census Scientists Discovered More than 1,100 New Marine Species

Up to 90% of ocean life remains unknown, and Ocean Census accelerates discovery and documentation through expeditions and workshops.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
6 days ago
OMG science

Ocean census reveals more than 1,100 new species

Only a tiny fraction of the seafloor has been directly observed, and a global effort has identified 1,121 new marine species to accelerate discovery and support conservation.
OMG science
fromColossal
3 days ago

In a Single Year, Ocean Census Scientists Discovered More than 1,100 New Marine Species

Up to 90% of ocean life remains unknown, and Ocean Census accelerates discovery and documentation through expeditions and workshops.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
6 days ago

Ocean census reveals more than 1,100 new species

Only a tiny fraction of the seafloor has been directly observed, and a global effort has identified 1,121 new marine species to accelerate discovery and support conservation.
OMG science
fromEngadget
3 days ago

James Webb telescope spots supermassive black hole that formed before its galaxy - Engadget

A supermassive black hole was directly measured in the early universe, appearing to form quickly without stellar collapse and challenging classical growth scenarios.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Planetary destruction on fast-forward': witnessing the disappearance of Indonesia's eternity glaciers'

Puncak Jaya’s remaining tropical glaciers have lost most of their area since 2002 and are expected to disappear soon due to fossil-fuel-driven warming.
#deep-sea-biology
OMG science
fromWIRED
3 days ago

A New Species of Tiny Octopus Was Discovered in the Galapagos Islands

Microeledone galapagensis is a newly named tiny deep-sea blue octopus from near Darwin Island in the Galápagos, identified using 3D CT imaging.
OMG science
fromWIRED
3 days ago

A New Species of Tiny Octopus Was Discovered in the Galapagos Islands

Microeledone galapagensis is a newly named tiny deep-sea blue octopus from near Darwin Island in the Galápagos, identified using 3D CT imaging.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
3 days ago

"Little red dot" in early Universe is a naked supermassive black hole

QSO1 contains a ~50-million-solar-mass black hole with very little surrounding stellar mass, implying unchanged luminosity rules for 13 billion years.
OMG science
fromNature
4 days ago

Darkness and body size shaped end-Cretaceous marine extinction patterns - Nature

Chicxulub impact-driven aerosols and wildfires caused abrupt cooling and CO2 rise, yet extinction selectivity varied by organism and latitude.
fromNature
4 days ago

Cellular water-potential sensing through biomolecular condensation - Nature

Water molecules are central to life, providing a solvent that maintains the functional structures and activities of biomolecules within cells. Cellular water molecules are bound by macromolecules, forming the hydration layer or freely diffuse in the bulk. These two portions of water are referred to as interfacial water and free water, respectively1. Water potential, which can be understood as the availability of free water, governs water uptake from the soil and transport within the plant3,4. The cellular water potential is sensitive to environmental fluctuations, particularly drought, high salinity and temperature stress1,2,5.
OMG science
OMG science
fromwww.dailymail.com
4 days ago

Scientists predict global populations could be HALVED by 2064

Earth’s population could be halved by 2064 under abrupt carrying-capacity collapse driven by climate, disease, conflict, or resource shortages.
OMG science
fromShore News Network
4 days ago

Atlantic Ocean Turns Caribbean Blue Off New York to Maryland as Massive Spring Bloom Spreads

Satellite images show bright blue and blue-green water along the Atlantic coast from New York to Maryland caused by offshore spring phytoplankton blooms.
fromState of the Planet
4 days ago

Ancient Antarctic Dust Reveals Signs of a Diminished Ross Ice Shelf

The research team found that dust from volcanic and ice-free regions around the Ross Sea replaced dust originating from South America, the dominant source during colder periods. This shift in origin they say reflects significant changes in the Ross Sea environment and regional wind patterns caused by a major retreat of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.
OMG science
OMG science
fromMail Online
4 days ago

World's first nuclear explosion forged an 'impossible' crystal

A Trinity nuclear blast created trinitite containing rare clathrate crystals with formation conditions far beyond natural temperatures and pressures.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
4 days ago

Want an oxygen-rich atmosphere? Stuff oxygen's friends in the mantle.

Cold subduction efficiency on a cooling Earth controlled carbon and sulfur flux, enabling oxygen buildup as supercontinents formed and broke apart.
OMG science
fromwww.ianvisits.co.uk
4 days ago

Science Museum to display rare surviving print of US Declaration of Independence

A rare Dunlap broadside copy of the 1776 Declaration of Independence will be displayed in London as part of an exhibition on early American science.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 days ago

A toothless, beaked, bipedal crocodile cousin roamed Earth 200 million years ago

More than 200 million years ago a bizarre, beaked, toothless reptile with tiny arms stomped around on its hind legs in what's now New Mexico. It may not have looked like it, but this newly identified creature was an ancient relative of a group of modern-day animals with a fearsome reputationcrocodiles.
OMG science
OMG science
fromNature
6 days ago

How I eavesdrop on frog conversations

Poison frog tadpoles communicate hunger through body vibrations that parents interpret to decide feeding and egg-laying actions.
fromKqed
5 days ago

Can New Cameras Save the Gray Whales in the San Francisco Bay? | KQED

After 21 dead gray whales surfaced in the bay last year, nearly half of which were struck by ship or freighter, scientists and community leaders put their hopes in a new AI-powered tool.
OMG science
fromMail Online
5 days ago

Adorable blue octopus is found off the coast of the Galapagos Islands

The 'cute little guy' was first spotted in 2015 during a deep-sea expedition, when a remotely operated underwater robot scanned the ocean floor near Darwin Island. As the camera explored around an underwater mountain 5,800 feet (1,773m) deep, the researchers noticed an octopus. Audio from the recorded footage includes the scientists' first reactions to the animal, with researchers exclaiming 'It's blue!' and 'He's tiny!'
OMG science
#indigenous-languages
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Vanishing tongues and life on Mars: Books in brief

Indigenous languages are rapidly disappearing, and multilingualism supports cultural and biological connectivity.
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Vanishing tongues and life on Mars: Books in brief

Indigenous languages are rapidly disappearing, and multilingualism supports human connection like biodiversity.
Uncertainty about human reproduction and survival on Mars leads to preferring life on Earth for now.
Innovation requires accepting failure, since early setbacks often precede later scientific confirmation.
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Vanishing tongues and life on Mars: Books in brief

Indigenous languages are rapidly disappearing, and multilingualism supports cultural and biological connectivity.
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Vanishing tongues and life on Mars: Books in brief

Indigenous languages are rapidly disappearing, and multilingualism supports human connection like biodiversity.
Uncertainty about human reproduction and survival on Mars leads to preferring life on Earth for now.
Innovation requires accepting failure, since early setbacks often precede later scientific confirmation.
OMG science
fromenglish.elpais.com
5 days ago

Longevity researcher Juan Carlos Izpisua presents latest data on aging process: It is a loss of identity at the cellular level'

Aging can be framed as cellular identity loss, and experimental treatments may restore that identity to reverse aging and halt related diseases.
OMG science
fromMail Online
5 days ago

Species of mosasaur measuring 43 FEET long terrorised the ancient seas

Tylosaurus rex is a newly identified, giant mosasaur with powerful jaws and serrated teeth that likely hunted as a top predator in ancient seas near Texas.
OMG science
fromWIRED
6 days ago

The Universe Is Full of 'Impossible' Black Holes. Scientists Now Know Why

Gravitational-wave observations indicate some heavy black holes in star clusters are second-generation merger remnants, not direct collapse products of massive stars.
fromFuturism
6 days ago

Scientists Say Huge Dam Blocking the Bering Strait Could Slow Effects of Climate Change

Sea levels are just the start of how climate change will upend the ocean. Rising temperatures are also threatening a critical artery that runs through the ocean known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC. This current, in short, sends warm water northwards and dumps colder water southwards in a giant loop, massively influencing the world's weather systems along the way.
OMG science
OMG science
fromArs Technica
6 days ago

Belugas may pass the mirror test-but does the mirror test still pass?

Beluga whales show behaviors consistent with mirror self-recognition, adding them to a very small group of species that pass the mark test.
fromFuturism
6 days ago

Sun Suddenly Blasts Powerful Radio Transmission for 19 Continuous Days

The Sun has broken a new record for continuous radio wave transmissions, blasting a powerful signal four times longer than any other similar phenomenon ever recorded. Data from the cosmic outburst, published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, details the record-breaking event, which lasted from August 21st to September 9th of 2025 - setting a record of 19 full days.
OMG science
#de-extinction
fromEngadget
1 week ago
OMG science

Chicks hatched from artificial eggshells, a new mission to study Earth's magnetosphere and more science stories - Engadget

OMG science
fromEngadget
1 week ago

Chicks hatched from artificial eggshells, a new mission to study Earth's magnetosphere and more science stories - Engadget

Colossal Biosciences hatched chicks from 3D-printed artificial eggshells as a step toward incubating de-extinction embryos for species like moa and dodo.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

A contentious effort to resurrect' the extinct moa and dodo takes a step forward

An artificial egg system using a silicone membrane aims to incubate embryos for resurrecting extinct birds, though scientists dispute de-extinction’s feasibility.
OMG science
fromWIRED
1 week ago

Quantum 'Jamming' Could Help Unlock the Mysteries of Causality

Quantum cryptography is being tested against the possibility that quantum mechanics may not be the ultimate theory, by building protocols on deeper principles like causality.
OMG science
fromThe Washington Post
2 weeks ago

A 59,000-year-old tooth reshapes what we know about Neanderthal dentistry

A Neanderthal molar shows a drilled cavity used to treat tooth decay, pushing dentistry history back about 40,000 years.
fromWIRED
1 week ago

The Emptiest Places in the Universe Might Contain Its Best Secrets

Space is filled with cosmic voids—vast regions mostly free of matter that have opened between dense threads of material that make up a cosmic web. Far from being vacant backwaters with little to study, these voids may hold solutions to some of the most persistent cosmic mysteries, such as the behavior of gravity, the nature of dark energy, and the so-called Hubble tension, an observational mismatch in the expansion rate of the universe that has caused astronomers' headaches for years.
OMG science
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Stephen Hawking's father worried his son does not study much', diaries reveal

Previously unknown coded diaries and family papers reveal raw details of Stephen Hawking’s formative years and his early motor neurone disease diagnosis.
fromEngadget
1 week ago

NASA shares Psyche spacecraft's photos of Mars - Engadget

Psyche took an image of the crater, measuring 290 miles in diameter, shortly after its closest approach with the planet. The various colors in the image are a result of the differences in the composition of dust, sand and bedrock, though NASA enhanced the colors to make them more pronounced.
OMG science
OMG science
fromIrish Independent
1 week ago

Magnitude 6 earthquake strikes Hawaii's Big Island; USGS assessing Kilauea volcano

A magnitude 6.0 earthquake near Honaunau-Napoopoo prompted USGS assessment of Kilauea, with no tsunami expected and no immediate damage reports.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Earth's molten outer core is behaving in chaotic, unexpected ways

Outer-core liquid iron flow beneath the Pacific reversed direction around 2010, weakening after 2020, challenging assumptions about deep-Earth stability and suggesting inner-core influence.
#milky-way
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

A possible merger between the Milky way and Andromeda galaxies should be mostly harmless

Andromeda’s collision with the Milky Way is uncertain, and any eventual merger would unfold over hundreds of millions of years with long-lasting effects.
OMG science
fromWIRED
1 week ago

All the Fancy Measuring Devices Used in Science Rely on Two Stone-Age Techniques

Measurement relies on comparison or counting, and science validates models by obtaining real-world values to test whether they hold.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

AI told some people they may have bixonimania.' The disease doesn't exist

A fabricated medical condition used by AI chatbots exposes serious problems in how large language models are trained and used for health advice.
#cosmology
OMG science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Ask Ethan: What do surveys of physicists actually reveal?

Ten physicists’ survey results on fundamental physics are less informative than respondents’ backgrounds and research focus.
OMG science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Space wasn't infinitely small when the hot Big Bang began

Observable light reaches farther than 13.8 billion light-years due to cosmic expansion, and the observable universe has a finite, time-dependent size.
OMG science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Ask Ethan: What do surveys of physicists actually reveal?

Ten physicists’ survey results on fundamental physics are less informative than respondents’ backgrounds and research focus.
OMG science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

Space wasn't infinitely small when the hot Big Bang began

Observable light reaches farther than 13.8 billion light-years due to cosmic expansion, and the observable universe has a finite, time-dependent size.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Pentagon releases second batch of UFO videos and first-hand testimony

Newly released UAP videos and documents add more sightings evidence, while providing no explanations or proof of extraterrestrial origin.
OMG science
fromNature
1 week ago

Hit a lab project glitch? Thinking about your thesis title like a storyteller can help you focus

Creativity in science comes from thinking differently, taking thoughtful risks, and letting imagination guide scientific work without abandoning it.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Hundreds of UFOs spotted near US nuclear weapons headquarters

Unexplained aerial phenomena near U.S. nuclear weapons facilities generated hundreds of reports, particle-collection efforts, and evidence suggesting non-meteorite origins.
#exoplanets
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago
OMG science

This exoplanet's sky is full of puffy clouds made of vaporized rockbut only on one side

JWST observations provide the first weather report for WASP-94A b by separating its tidally locked day and night sides to measure atmospheric composition.
fromArs Technica
1 week ago
OMG science

JWST maps the weather on a hot gas giant 700 light-years away

WASP-94A b shows time-varying cloud cover, meaning averaged transmission spectroscopy can misrepresent tidally locked exoplanet atmospheres and chemistry.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

This exoplanet's sky is full of puffy clouds made of vaporized rockbut only on one side

JWST observations provide the first weather report for WASP-94A b by separating its tidally locked day and night sides to measure atmospheric composition.
OMG science
fromArs Technica
1 week ago

JWST maps the weather on a hot gas giant 700 light-years away

WASP-94A b shows time-varying cloud cover, meaning averaged transmission spectroscopy can misrepresent tidally locked exoplanet atmospheres and chemistry.
OMG science
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

How long can a civilization survive before it collapses? Stable utopias are the least likely scenarios'

Civilizations are more likely to collapse when resource consumption exceeds regeneration, especially under fragile institutions and technological risks.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Tentacles, pointy teeth and the T-rex of the sea: the Natural History Museum on beasts that once ruled the oceans

Its long neck allowed its head to get a head start on its body, says the museum's exhibition and interpretation manager. So it could sneak up on prey and grab it [with its mouth] before its body and flippers created a disturbance in the water.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Scientists Detect Huge Structure Under Ocean Fueling the Deadly Upcoming El Nino

Called a Kelvin wave, scientists have identified a massive pool of warm water in the Pacific carrying temperatures up to 13.5 degrees Fahrenheit above average in similar parts of the ocean. As the Wall Street Journal notes, that's a major heat wave as far as the ocean is concerned, as deep water temperature patterns take much longer to shift than they would on land.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Size isn't everything: Small volcanoes can spread ash 1000s of miles

Scientists discovered that the last eruption of the Newberry Volcano in Oregon in 686 AD spread ash more than 3,100 miles (5,000km) across the globe - significantly further than was previously believed to be possible for a volcano of its size.
OMG science
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Mysterious fossils found in the US could prove famous Bible story true

Polystrate fossils show upright tree trunks through multiple rock layers, prompting debate over whether rapid burial from catastrophic flooding occurred or whether repeated local events over long time formed them.
fromNature
1 week ago

See the clouds streaming and vanishing around this planet - 690 light years away

The telescope revealed tiny differences in the starlight's spectrum between the start, middle and end of the planet's transit in front of its star. The measurements showed that during each transit, the part of the atmosphere that crosses first in front of the star is covered with thick clouds - probably made of droplets of minerals rather than water, given that the planet's dayside temperature is at least 1,600 kelvin. But by the end of the transit, the trailing part of the atmosphere that crosses last is clear.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Scientists discover why gold doesn't rust'

Gold sure does glitter, holding a shine far longer than most metals. And now two researchers have explained why. In a paper published today in Physical Review Letters, Santu Biswas and Matthew Montemore of Tulane University reveal the reason gold is harder to oxidize than similar metals. They key, they say, is the same chemical trickery that gives it a beautiful zigzag structure when viewed under a scanning tunneling microscope.
OMG science
fromianVisits
1 week ago

Touch ancient poo at the Natural History Museum's Jurassic sea monsters exhibition

The Natural History Museum is inviting people to touch some poo in a new exhibition about the monsters of the Jurassic Oceans. It's hundreds of millions old though, so you're touching a stone. A pooy stone which will still make children (and some adults) go a bit ick at the thought.
OMG science
fromIrish Independent
1 week ago

Bryson DeChambeau: I don't think Moon landing footage is real

“Oh, I don't, here we, conspiracy theory, I don't know,” DeChambeau said. “Look, Elon [Musk] says we've definitely gone there. So I tend to go that route, because he's the man that knows quite a bit about all that. 'Artemis just went around the Moon. So I do believe if we spent a lot of our resources like they say we did, I think we did. I don't think the footage is real. But I think we did go to the Moon. I don't know about the footage. It's quite, it's quite wild.'”
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 week ago

Hidden structural features inside Egypt's Great Pyramid may have helped it withstand earthquakes, new study finds

Researchers took dozens of measurements from inside the Khufu pyramid to characterize its fundamental frequency, a measure that can inform how a building might respond during an earthquake. You can think of a building's fundamental, or natural, frequency like the sway of a swing. It might take a lot of force to move the swing from a still position. But at a certain point, even just a small push to a moving swing can send it flying. A similar effect happens in structures: a building's natural sway affects how it responds during pushes or earthquakes.
OMG science
[ Load more ]