RWFIB 796. Sports Results Affect Voter Behavior
نتایج ورزشی بر رفتار رای دهندگان تأثیر می گذارد
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni121
Local college football wins before elections upped incumbents' vote totals, and college basketball wins influenced presidential ratings. Karen Hopkin reports
Full Transcript:
When it comes to elections, sometimes we vote with our heads and sometimes with our hearts. But scientists at Stanford say we might also be voting with our pompoms. Because they’ve found that our behavior at the polls is influenced by the results of local sporting events, work published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [Andrew Healy, Neil Malhotra and Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, http://bit.ly/cURQ2E]
Humans are emotional creatures. And our strong feelings about one thing can spread to another. So the Stanford scientists wondered whether events that are unrelated to government performance might sway the way people feel about their elected officials. And what could be less relevant to the workings in Washington or your state capital than college football?
The researchers looked at the election results from 20 years’ worth of presidential, senatorial and gubernatorial races. And they found that a home-team win before the election gave the incumbent a boost of almost two percentage points. The more beloved the team, the bigger the bounce.
And it’s not just football. In a separate survey, the scientists found that NCAA college basketball results affected presidential approval ratings. So next election day, you might think about practicing a little separation of stadium and state.
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening
نتایج ورزشی بر رفتار رای دهندگان تأثیر می گذارد
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni121
Local college football wins before elections upped incumbents' vote totals, and college basketball wins influenced presidential ratings. Karen Hopkin reports
Full Transcript:
When it comes to elections, sometimes we vote with our heads and sometimes with our hearts. But scientists at Stanford say we might also be voting with our pompoms. Because they’ve found that our behavior at the polls is influenced by the results of local sporting events, work published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [Andrew Healy, Neil Malhotra and Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, http://bit.ly/cURQ2E]
Humans are emotional creatures. And our strong feelings about one thing can spread to another. So the Stanford scientists wondered whether events that are unrelated to government performance might sway the way people feel about their elected officials. And what could be less relevant to the workings in Washington or your state capital than college football?
The researchers looked at the election results from 20 years’ worth of presidential, senatorial and gubernatorial races. And they found that a home-team win before the election gave the incumbent a boost of almost two percentage points. The more beloved the team, the bigger the bounce.
And it’s not just football. In a separate survey, the scientists found that NCAA college basketball results affected presidential approval ratings. So next election day, you might think about practicing a little separation of stadium and state.
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening
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👇RWFIB 800. Lemur Latrine Trees Serve as Community Bulletin Boards
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RWFIB 800. Lemur Latrine Trees Serve as Community Bulletin Boards
درختان توالت Lemur بعنوان تابلوهای اعلانات جمعی (عمومی/همزیستگاه) بکار میروند
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni208
Primatologists spent almost 1,100 hours watching lemurs do their business on their designated tree and concluded that urine and glandular secretions serve as posted messages. Steve Mirsky reports
Full Transcript:
People have been leaving messages on bathroom walls for thousands of years. Just google “ancient Roman bathroom graffiti.” But we’re not the only ones to use latrines for information exchange—as two German researchers have confirmed after hundreds of hours watching lemurs pee and poop. For science.
Primatologists Iris Dröscher and Peter Kappeler concentrated on seven sets of pair-bonded members of a species called white-footed sportive lemurs, at a nature reserve in southern Madagascar. Their report is in the journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. [Iris Dröscher & Peter M. Kappeler Maintenance of familiarity and social bonding via communal latrine use in a solitary primate (Lepilemur leucopus)]
Many animals use the same spots repeatedly to do their business, primates in particular. For these lemurs, a specific tree becomes the urine and feces focal point. And because chemical compounds in their waste transmit information, the so-called latrine tree becomes like a bulletin board to post messages for the rest of the community.
Based on their 1,097 hours of observations, the researchers conclude that urine and glandular secretions left on the tree trunk are the primary message vehicles. Feces mostly just collects on the ground.
Some urine telegrams are probably signals from a particular lemur to the neighbors that he or she is around. But male lemurs upped their latrine visits when potential competitors for females came into their home area. So the frequent chemical messages left on the tree probably say in that case, “Buzz off, buddy, she’s with me.” In lemur.
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🐀 lemur
لمورها گروه ویژهای از نخستیها هستند که تنها در ماداگاسکار و جزایر کومورو یافت میشوند.
درختان توالت Lemur بعنوان تابلوهای اعلانات جمعی (عمومی/همزیستگاه) بکار میروند
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni208
Primatologists spent almost 1,100 hours watching lemurs do their business on their designated tree and concluded that urine and glandular secretions serve as posted messages. Steve Mirsky reports
Full Transcript:
People have been leaving messages on bathroom walls for thousands of years. Just google “ancient Roman bathroom graffiti.” But we’re not the only ones to use latrines for information exchange—as two German researchers have confirmed after hundreds of hours watching lemurs pee and poop. For science.
Primatologists Iris Dröscher and Peter Kappeler concentrated on seven sets of pair-bonded members of a species called white-footed sportive lemurs, at a nature reserve in southern Madagascar. Their report is in the journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. [Iris Dröscher & Peter M. Kappeler Maintenance of familiarity and social bonding via communal latrine use in a solitary primate (Lepilemur leucopus)]
Many animals use the same spots repeatedly to do their business, primates in particular. For these lemurs, a specific tree becomes the urine and feces focal point. And because chemical compounds in their waste transmit information, the so-called latrine tree becomes like a bulletin board to post messages for the rest of the community.
Based on their 1,097 hours of observations, the researchers conclude that urine and glandular secretions left on the tree trunk are the primary message vehicles. Feces mostly just collects on the ground.
Some urine telegrams are probably signals from a particular lemur to the neighbors that he or she is around. But male lemurs upped their latrine visits when potential competitors for females came into their home area. So the frequent chemical messages left on the tree probably say in that case, “Buzz off, buddy, she’s with me.” In lemur.
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening #vocabulary
🐀 lemur
لمورها گروه ویژهای از نخستیها هستند که تنها در ماداگاسکار و جزایر کومورو یافت میشوند.
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👇RWFIB 810. Spit Analysis Reveals Hocker's Age
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👇RWFIB 810. Spit Analysis Reveals Hocker's Age 🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening #vocabulary 👇
RWFIB 810. Spit Analysis Reveals Hocker's Age
تجزیه و تحلیل تُف، سنّ تفکننده را نشان میدهد
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحانی/تمرینی) Apeuni328
An analysis of a person's DNA methylation finds that the number of methyl groups attached to the DNA correlates with the person's age--making saliva analysis a possible CSI tool. Cynthia Graber reports
Full Transcript:
Saliva contains many useful components. Lubricants. Enzymes for breaking down food. And now, compounds that can reveal a person’s age. That’s according to a study in the journal Public Library of Science ONE. [Sven Bocklandt et al., "Epigenetic Predictor of Age"]
During normal development, DNA in your body gets what’s called methylated. Small chemicals called methyl groups bind to the DNA, helping to determine which genes become active. But the patterns of methylation change as we grow older. Which was a clue that measuring methylation might give away age.
The researchers studied DNA in saliva contributed by 34 pairs of male identical twins, ages 21 to 55. They found 88 sites on the men’s DNA where the amount of methylation correlated with their ages. The scientists next verified that finding in 60 men and women, ages 18 to 70.
Then they narrowed in on two genes that had the strongest age-related correlation. And using just that data, they found that they could estimate the ages of their saliva contributors to within five years.
This technique might help in crime scene investigations—recovered saliva could tell the age of a perpetrator. So if you’re worried about anyone knowing how old you are, be careful where you spit.
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➡️ Saliva بزاق دهان
collocation:
the patterns of methylation, The researchers studied DNA, the amount of methylation correlated with their ages, The scientists next verified that, had the strongest age-related correlation, crime scene investigations.
تجزیه و تحلیل تُف، سنّ تفکننده را نشان میدهد
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحانی/تمرینی) Apeuni328
An analysis of a person's DNA methylation finds that the number of methyl groups attached to the DNA correlates with the person's age--making saliva analysis a possible CSI tool. Cynthia Graber reports
Full Transcript:
Saliva contains many useful components. Lubricants. Enzymes for breaking down food. And now, compounds that can reveal a person’s age. That’s according to a study in the journal Public Library of Science ONE. [Sven Bocklandt et al., "Epigenetic Predictor of Age"]
During normal development, DNA in your body gets what’s called methylated. Small chemicals called methyl groups bind to the DNA, helping to determine which genes become active. But the patterns of methylation change as we grow older. Which was a clue that measuring methylation might give away age.
The researchers studied DNA in saliva contributed by 34 pairs of male identical twins, ages 21 to 55. They found 88 sites on the men’s DNA where the amount of methylation correlated with their ages. The scientists next verified that finding in 60 men and women, ages 18 to 70.
Then they narrowed in on two genes that had the strongest age-related correlation. And using just that data, they found that they could estimate the ages of their saliva contributors to within five years.
This technique might help in crime scene investigations—recovered saliva could tell the age of a perpetrator. So if you’re worried about anyone knowing how old you are, be careful where you spit.
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening #vocabulary
➡️ Saliva بزاق دهان
collocation:
the patterns of methylation, The researchers studied DNA, the amount of methylation correlated with their ages, The scientists next verified that, had the strongest age-related correlation, crime scene investigations.
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👇RWFIB 812. Younger Kids Don't Care What's Fair 🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening 👇
812. Younger Kids Don't Care What's Fair
بچههای جوانتر به آنچه عادلانه است اهمیت نمیدهند
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni347
Children below the age of about seven were indifferent to whether their playmates shared in a candy giveaway, but older kids were more sensitive about fairness. Karen Hopkin reports
Full Transcript :
If you’ve ever spent time with toddlers, sooner or later you’ll hear the word “Mine!” It’s usually followed by an adult saying, “Now, now, you have to learn to share.” But a study in the August 28th issue of Nature suggests we may be wasting our breath. Because kids in the preschool set have no interest in making sure everyone gets their fair share.
Scientists from Switzerland wondered if, and when, young children begin to consider the welfare of others. So they gathered up over 200 Swiss schoolchildren and a small mountain of candy. And one-by-one they gave each child a choice that goes something like this: I can give one M&M to you and one to one of the other kids. Or I can give one to you—and none to anyone else.
Children who were three or four years old didn’t much care whether or not their friends also got an M&M, or a jellybean or any other sweet. But that attitude changed by the time the kids were seven or eight, when almost 80 percent of them opted to be fair. Okay, that doesn’t exactly make them candidates for a Nobel Peace Prize. But maybe magnanimousness begins with an M…&M (example).
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🍬 M&M
شکلات های دکمه ای شکل چند رنگی
🍬 Jelly bean
آبنبات ژلهای
🍬 magnanimousness
بزرگواری
بچههای جوانتر به آنچه عادلانه است اهمیت نمیدهند
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni347
Children below the age of about seven were indifferent to whether their playmates shared in a candy giveaway, but older kids were more sensitive about fairness. Karen Hopkin reports
Full Transcript :
If you’ve ever spent time with toddlers, sooner or later you’ll hear the word “Mine!” It’s usually followed by an adult saying, “Now, now, you have to learn to share.” But a study in the August 28th issue of Nature suggests we may be wasting our breath. Because kids in the preschool set have no interest in making sure everyone gets their fair share.
Scientists from Switzerland wondered if, and when, young children begin to consider the welfare of others. So they gathered up over 200 Swiss schoolchildren and a small mountain of candy. And one-by-one they gave each child a choice that goes something like this: I can give one M&M to you and one to one of the other kids. Or I can give one to you—and none to anyone else.
Children who were three or four years old didn’t much care whether or not their friends also got an M&M, or a jellybean or any other sweet. But that attitude changed by the time the kids were seven or eight, when almost 80 percent of them opted to be fair. Okay, that doesn’t exactly make them candidates for a Nobel Peace Prize. But maybe magnanimousness begins with an M…&M (example).
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening #vocabulary
🍬 M&M
شکلات های دکمه ای شکل چند رنگی
🍬 Jelly bean
آبنبات ژلهای
🍬 magnanimousness
بزرگواری
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👇 RWFIB 797. Cash Rewards Help Dieters 🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening 👇
RWFIB 797. Cash Rewards Help Dieters
جوایز نقدی به رژیم های غذایی کمک می کنند
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni122
A study in JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association finds that people who were rewarded with a few hundred dollars for losing a few pounds were much more successful than those who just dieted. Steve Mirsky reports
Full Transcript:
Finally, science has something you can give people that really does help them lose weight: money. Rewarding dieters with a few hundred dollars is effective for promoting at least short-term weight loss. That’s according to a study in the December 10th issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The researchers tried two approaches. In one, study subjects got paid if they lost 16 pounds in 16 weeks. In the other, participants invested their own money, which they lost if they didn’t make that same goal. A control group just tried to lose weight without any economic incentive. And the losers are:
Dieters who got paid for losing—53 percent of them met the target. Followed by those who risked their own money—47 percent of them lost the 16 pounds. And the regular old dieters, for whom losing weight was its own reward? Only 10.5 percent of them got to their goal. And that group averaged just a four-pound loss, compared with 14 pounds for the paid dieters.
So, what do you do with the money you win by losing weight? That’s easy: pizza!
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening
جوایز نقدی به رژیم های غذایی کمک می کنند
ریدینگ اپیونی (سوال غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni122
A study in JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association finds that people who were rewarded with a few hundred dollars for losing a few pounds were much more successful than those who just dieted. Steve Mirsky reports
Full Transcript:
Finally, science has something you can give people that really does help them lose weight: money. Rewarding dieters with a few hundred dollars is effective for promoting at least short-term weight loss. That’s according to a study in the December 10th issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The researchers tried two approaches. In one, study subjects got paid if they lost 16 pounds in 16 weeks. In the other, participants invested their own money, which they lost if they didn’t make that same goal. A control group just tried to lose weight without any economic incentive. And the losers are:
Dieters who got paid for losing—53 percent of them met the target. Followed by those who risked their own money—47 percent of them lost the 16 pounds. And the regular old dieters, for whom losing weight was its own reward? Only 10.5 percent of them got to their goal. And that group averaged just a four-pound loss, compared with 14 pounds for the paid dieters.
So, what do you do with the money you win by losing weight? That’s easy: pizza!
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening
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1. How do languages die?
A language dies only when the last person who speaks it dies. But you know, some people say it dies when the second-last person who speaks it dies. Because then the last person has no one left to talk to. Well, of course, languages have come and gone throughout history as communities have come and gone. But what's happening now is something quite extraordinary.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
🗣 David Crystal
A language dies only when the last person who speaks it dies. But you know, some people say it dies when the second-last person who speaks it dies. Because then the last person has no one left to talk to. Well, of course, languages have come and gone throughout history as communities have come and gone. But what's happening now is something quite extraordinary.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
🗣 David Crystal
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2. How many languages are dying?
There are about 6000 languages in the world, more or less. Nobody knows the exact number. And of these, people think that about half of them are so seriously endangered that they are likely to die out in the course of the present century. Now the present century is a hundred years, half is 3000 languages, so that means one language is dying out somewhere in the world, on average, every two weeks.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
There are about 6000 languages in the world, more or less. Nobody knows the exact number. And of these, people think that about half of them are so seriously endangered that they are likely to die out in the course of the present century. Now the present century is a hundred years, half is 3000 languages, so that means one language is dying out somewhere in the world, on average, every two weeks.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
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3. Why are they dying?
There are all kinds of reasons why languages die. One is the physical reasons when people are affected by famine and disease and earthquake. Another is genocide, when some countries deliberately try to stamp out a small language. The main reason is globalisation. That is, there are some huge languages in the world, like English and Spanish, and Arabic and French, and these are like steamrollers crushing the smaller languages that they find in their path.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
There are all kinds of reasons why languages die. One is the physical reasons when people are affected by famine and disease and earthquake. Another is genocide, when some countries deliberately try to stamp out a small language. The main reason is globalisation. That is, there are some huge languages in the world, like English and Spanish, and Arabic and French, and these are like steamrollers crushing the smaller languages that they find in their path.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
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4. Can anything be done?
A great deal can be done to preserve an endangered language. The first thing is that the people themselves must want the language to be preserved. That's very important. The second thing is the powers-that-be must want the language to be preserved. They must have a respect for the minority languages that are in their care. And the third thing that has to be there, of course, is cash. It costs quite a lot of money to preserve an endangered language. Think about it - you have to train the teachers, you have to write books for the children, and all that sort of thing. It doesn't cost an extraordinary amount of money, but it does cost a bit. So without money, endangered languages don't have a positive future.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
A great deal can be done to preserve an endangered language. The first thing is that the people themselves must want the language to be preserved. That's very important. The second thing is the powers-that-be must want the language to be preserved. They must have a respect for the minority languages that are in their care. And the third thing that has to be there, of course, is cash. It costs quite a lot of money to preserve an endangered language. Think about it - you have to train the teachers, you have to write books for the children, and all that sort of thing. It doesn't cost an extraordinary amount of money, but it does cost a bit. So without money, endangered languages don't have a positive future.
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
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4. Can anything be done? A great deal can be done to preserve an endangered language. The first thing is that the people themselves must want the language to be preserved. That's very important. The second thing is the powers-that-be must want the language…
👆 My answer: #SST
The lecture was about dying a language, which comprised coming and going throughout the history. The spokesperson determined 6000 languages, and the essence of being seriously in danger emphasized dying out every two weeks. Although both physical reasons and genocides could be inferred from globalization and cash, the impacts of crushing smaller languages, preserving languages by intentions of people, respecting minority languages, and not having a positive future were acknowledged. 70w
🆔 @EngStud #PTE #podcast #listening #RL #Retell_Lecture
The lecture was about dying a language, which comprised coming and going throughout the history. The spokesperson determined 6000 languages, and the essence of being seriously in danger emphasized dying out every two weeks. Although both physical reasons and genocides could be inferred from globalization and cash, the impacts of crushing smaller languages, preserving languages by intentions of people, respecting minority languages, and not having a positive future were acknowledged. 70w
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RWFIB 818. Black Plant Life Could Thrive on Other Planets
زندگی گیاهان سیاه می تواند در سیارات دیگر رشد و پرورش مناسب کند (رونق بگیرد)
ریدینگ اپیونی (غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni437
Photosynthetic plants on other planets that revolve around different kinds of suns could be mostly gray or black. Cynthia Graber reports
Full Transcript :
Most plants capture sunlight. And the results are usually green. Because in photosynthesis, plant chlorophyll uses wavelengths of blue and our sun’s abundant red, and reflects green. But what if—as many sci-fi scenarios suggest—there’s an Earth-like planet with multiple suns? Researchers at England’s University of Saint Andrews say that photosynthetic life on such a planet might end up as a drab black or gray. Or even with a high SPF.
A quarter of all stars like our sun actually exist in multi-star systems. Plants on a planet with two sunlike stars could need protection against too much radiation—they might evolve their own UV-blocking sunscreens.
Or a planet with two stars may have one sun-like star, along with a red dwarf star that’s also common in multi-star systems. Any photosynthetic life would be adapted to take advantage of the available light waves.
Plants that relied at times mostly on the dim red dwarf might need light from all across the visible spectrum. They wouldn’t reflect any wavelengths, so they'd appear black. These ideas were presented at the current Royal Astronomical Society meeting. So for healthy eating on some other planets, try the leafy dark salad.
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening
🟢 #collocation
capture sunlight, plant chlorophyll, wavelengths of blue, many sci-fi scenarios, an Earth-like planet, England's University of, photosynthetic life, a drab black, a high SPF, A quarter of all stars, multi-star systems, sunlike stars, protection against/from, a red dwarf star, take advantage of, the available light waves, the dim red dwarf, the visible spectrum.
زندگی گیاهان سیاه می تواند در سیارات دیگر رشد و پرورش مناسب کند (رونق بگیرد)
ریدینگ اپیونی (غیرامتحان/تمرینی) Apeuni437
Photosynthetic plants on other planets that revolve around different kinds of suns could be mostly gray or black. Cynthia Graber reports
Full Transcript :
Most plants capture sunlight. And the results are usually green. Because in photosynthesis, plant chlorophyll uses wavelengths of blue and our sun’s abundant red, and reflects green. But what if—as many sci-fi scenarios suggest—there’s an Earth-like planet with multiple suns? Researchers at England’s University of Saint Andrews say that photosynthetic life on such a planet might end up as a drab black or gray. Or even with a high SPF.
A quarter of all stars like our sun actually exist in multi-star systems. Plants on a planet with two sunlike stars could need protection against too much radiation—they might evolve their own UV-blocking sunscreens.
Or a planet with two stars may have one sun-like star, along with a red dwarf star that’s also common in multi-star systems. Any photosynthetic life would be adapted to take advantage of the available light waves.
Plants that relied at times mostly on the dim red dwarf might need light from all across the visible spectrum. They wouldn’t reflect any wavelengths, so they'd appear black. These ideas were presented at the current Royal Astronomical Society meeting. So for healthy eating on some other planets, try the leafy dark salad.
🆔 @EngStud #reading #PTE #podcast #listening
🟢 #collocation
capture sunlight, plant chlorophyll, wavelengths of blue, many sci-fi scenarios, an Earth-like planet, England's University of, photosynthetic life, a drab black, a high SPF, A quarter of all stars, multi-star systems, sunlike stars, protection against/from, a red dwarf star, take advantage of, the available light waves, the dim red dwarf, the visible spectrum.
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