Jeff Bezos launches to space aboard New Shepard rocket ship
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Proton-M rocket launched into space with "Nauka" module for ISS on board.
Here's the recording of the live translation up to the animation.
Here's the recording of the live translation up to the animation.
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Extreme Weather Sweeps The World as Natural Disasters Unleash on Multiple Continents
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Extreme Weather Sweeps The World as Natural Disasters Unleash on Multiple Continents
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ScienceAlert
Extreme Weather Sweeps The World as Natural Disasters Unleash on Multiple Continents
Extreme weather is striking all over the world, illustrating how vulnerable swathes of humanity are to natural disasters.
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Malaysia Tech Month 2021 (MTM 2021) is a mega-virtual, month-long curation of electrifying digital and technology keynotes, workshops, discussion panels and business-matching sessions. It will feature distinguished group of local and international industry speakers and investors to share their expert thoughts and experiences in 4IR-driven digital economy.
Register: https://malaysiatechmonth.hubilo.com/community
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Register: https://malaysiatechmonth.hubilo.com/community
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Everything you need to know about the launch of the "Nauka" module for ISS:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2021/07/nauka-launch/
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2021/07/nauka-launch/
NASASpaceFlight.com
Nauka science module launches to ISS
Good things come to those (modules) that wait. On July 21, at 14:58:25 UTC (10:58:25…
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VFX Artist 'Unwraps' Classic Apollo Pic to Show Us What Buzz Aldrin Saw on The Moon
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VFX Artist 'Unwraps' Classic Apollo Pic to Show Us What Buzz Aldrin Saw on The Moon
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ScienceAlert
VFX Artist 'Unwraps' Classic Apollo Pic to Show Us What Buzz Aldrin Saw on The Moon
Fifty-two years after the first historical Moon landing, we've been given a brand new perspective of a classic Apollo-era photo.
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Drinking 6 Cups of Coffee a Day? Your Brain May Pay For It Later, Says a Large Study
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Physicists Have Developed a New Way to Levitate Objects Using Sound Only
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Physicists Have Developed a New Way to Levitate Objects Using Sound Only
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Physicists Have Developed a New Way to Levitate Objects Using Sound Only
A newly developed method of levitating and manipulating tiny objects using sound waves could represent a major step forward for the technology.
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The root of today’s quantum revolution was John Stewart Bell’s 1964 theorem showing that quantum mechanics really permits instantaneous connections between far-apart locations.
We take for granted that an event in one part of the world cannot instantly affect what happens far away. This principle, which physicists call locality, was long regarded as a bedrock assumption about the laws of physics. So when Albert Einstein and two colleagues showed in 1935 that quantum mechanics permits “spooky action at a distance,” as Einstein put it, this feature of the theory seemed highly suspect. Physicists wondered whether quantum mechanics was missing something.
How Bell’s Theorem Proved ‘Spooky Action at a Distance’ Is Real
We take for granted that an event in one part of the world cannot instantly affect what happens far away. This principle, which physicists call locality, was long regarded as a bedrock assumption about the laws of physics. So when Albert Einstein and two colleagues showed in 1935 that quantum mechanics permits “spooky action at a distance,” as Einstein put it, this feature of the theory seemed highly suspect. Physicists wondered whether quantum mechanics was missing something.
How Bell’s Theorem Proved ‘Spooky Action at a Distance’ Is Real
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The Gift of Fire Lit The Flame of Knowledge Transfer 400,000 Years Ago, Study Finds
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The Gift of Fire Lit The Flame of Knowledge Transfer 400,000 Years Ago, Study Finds
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The Gift of Fire Lit The Flame of Knowledge Transfer 400,000 Years Ago, Study Finds
Once early humans figured out how to tame a wild flame – to cook food, warm the camp, extend daylight, and keep predators away – some scientists think the skill spread like wildfire.
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The Entire ISS Just Spun Around as New Russian Module Malfunctioned After Docking
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The Entire ISS Just Spun Around as New Russian Module Malfunctioned After Docking
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The Entire ISS Just Spun Around as New Russian Module Malfunctioned After Docking
A new Russian space-station module malfunctioned after it docked on Thursday. The module, called Nauka, starting unexpectedly firing its thrusters — which moved the entire station out of position.
Scott Manley's video about the malfunctioning of the new Russian module "Nauka" on ISS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTR5evpFLb4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTR5evpFLb4
YouTube
Russia's New Space Station Module Causes Alarm On ISS
Nauka, the new module for the ISS has had a troubled journey to the ISS after having problems soon after launch necessitating a delay, burning extra fuel and losing the option for a second docking attempt.
However the real drama came hours after the successful…
However the real drama came hours after the successful…
Fossil discovered in northwestern Canada could rewrite the early history of animal life — but some palaeontologists are not convinced it’s real.
Most major groups of animals — including arthropods, molluscs and worms — first appear in the fossil record during the Cambrian explosion, 541 million years ago. But according to a paper published in Nature1, sponge fossils from northwestern Canada could be 350 million years older, significantly pushing back the date of Earth’s earliest-known animals.
Most major groups of animals — including arthropods, molluscs and worms — first appear in the fossil record during the Cambrian explosion, 541 million years ago. But according to a paper published in Nature1, sponge fossils from northwestern Canada could be 350 million years older, significantly pushing back the date of Earth’s earliest-known animals.
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Experiment Reveals Why Getting More Sleep Isn't Always Beneficial
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Experiment Reveals Why Getting More Sleep Isn't Always Beneficial
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Experiment Reveals Why Getting More Sleep Isn't Always Beneficial
Getting enough sleep is a vital part of staying fit and healthy, which is why scientists are constantly looking at ways of ensuring this happens.
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This Controversial Cave Art Really Was Painted by Neanderthals, Study Confirms
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This Controversial Cave Art Really Was Painted by Neanderthals, Study Confirms
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This Controversial Cave Art Really Was Painted by Neanderthals, Study Confirms
Neanderthals, long perceived to have been unsophisticated and brutish, really did paint stalagmites in a Spanish cave more than 60,000 years ago, according to a study published on Monday.
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The Pentagon Is Experimenting With AI That Can Predict Events 'Days in Advance'
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The Pentagon Is Experimenting With AI That Can Predict Events 'Days in Advance'
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The Pentagon Is Experimenting With AI That Can Predict Events 'Days in Advance'
If you're wondering just how advanced artificial intelligence (AI) systems are getting, then know this: the US military is testing an experimental AI network tasked with identifying likely future events worthy of closer attention, and days befor
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Astronomers Find Dancing Cosmic 'Ghosts' Spawned by The Wild Weather of Black Holes
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Astronomers Find Dancing Cosmic 'Ghosts' Spawned by The Wild Weather of Black Holes
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Astronomers Find Dancing Cosmic 'Ghosts' Spawned by The Wild Weather of Black Holes
Clouds of electrons blooming in deep space have been revealed in a whole new level of detail, showing cosmic phenomena unlike anything astronomers have seen before.
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For The First Time, Researchers Just Watched How Plants Slurp Up Water
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For The First Time, Researchers Just Watched How Plants Slurp Up Water
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For The First Time, Researchers Just Watched How Plants Slurp Up Water
Plants thirst for water, just as we animals do, but exactly how they slurp it through their tissues has remained a bit of a mystery as attempting to see it happening impairs the process.