When Will We See Another Bright Comet?0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 10, 2019
And where have they all gone?
And where have they all gone?
Two interns are prototyping soft robots made using 3D printing and silicon.
The U.S. navy is updating its procedure for pilots to report unauthorized and unidentified flying objects, the U.S. navy’s chief of Information told CTVNews.ca in an email that didn’t provide a precise timeline, but stressed the changes would be coming soon.
A Native American man in Montana has what may be the oldest DNA native to the Americas, according to news reports.
Fictional crash tests the ways that disaster response and space agencies would deal with such a natural disaster
New method cuts through galaxies’ messy emissions, provides clearer window into dark matter, dark energy
Walter Alvarez’s discovery of the element iridium in the K-Pg boundary, and the discovery of the Chicxulub Crater led to the reason for the extinction of the dinosaurs.
Person re-identification entails the automated identification of the same person in multiple images from different cameras and with different backgrounds, angles or positions.
Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HU) have found a way to transform skin cells into the three major stem cell types that comprise early-stage embryos. The work (in mouse cells) has significant implications for modelling embryonic disease and placental dysfunctions, as well as paving the way to create whole embryos from skin cells.
In the wee hours of August 31, 1973, police in Cordele, a south Middle Georgia town that straddles Interstate 75, radioed cops 60 miles away in Macon: Be on the lookout.