2015年8月17日 星期一

2015-08-18 Singapore Science


NDTV
   
Mystery of Saturn's 'F Ring' Cracked, Says Study   
NDTV
Saturn and its main rings seen by Cassini spacecraft. Saturn's F wing is located just oustide the main rings. (AFP Photo / NASA/ JPL / Space Science Institute). Paris: An enigmatic ring of icy particles circling Saturn, herded into a narrow ribbon by ...
Icy collision created Saturn's mystery 'F ring' and moons   ABC Science Online
Saturn's F ring: Born of cosmic collision   Malay Mail Online

all 15 news articles »   


Japan Focus
   
Volcanic Hazards as Components of Complex Systems: The Case of Japan   
Japan Focus
The past year or so has been a time of particularly vigorous volcanic activity in Japan, or at least activity that has intruded into public awareness. Perhaps most dramatic was the deadly eruption of Mt. Ontake on September 27, 2014, whose 57 ...

and more »   


Wall Street Journal
   
China's super computer Tianhe-1 re-started after Tianjin blasts   
Economic Times
BEIJING: China's supercomputer Tianhe-1 which was shut down after massive warehouse explosions rocked Tianjin city last week is being restarted, official media reported today. The storage and communication of the computer has been completely restored ...

Supercomputer shut down due to China blasts   Sentinel Republic
Supercomputer resumes service after Tianjin blasts   Xinhua
China's energy sector asked to do safety checks after Tianjin blasts   AsiaOne
The TeCake   
Techworm   
Computerworld India   
all 68 news articles »   


BBC News
   
Ancient underwater plant 'could be world's first flower'   
BBC News
Botanists in the US say an ancient plant that grew underwater in what is modern day Europe may have been the world's first known flowering plant. Researchers studied more than 1,000 fossils of the Montsechia Vidalii species as part of the study. The ...
'First flowers' may have 'bloomed' in water, not on land, fossils suggest   Los Angeles Times
Prehistoric Fossil Found in Spain May Be Mythical 'First Flower'   NBCNews.com
Plant from 130 million years ago is among 'first flowers'   The Sun Daily
Newsweek   
I4U News   
Washington Post   
all 32 news articles »   


9news.com.au
   
Spectacular collision of galaxies captured on camera   
9news.com.au
The discovery was made by a team of astronomers led by Professor Quentin Parker at the University of Hong Kong and Professor Albert Zijlstra at the University of Manchester, using the UK Schmidt Telescope in Australia, according to a paper published by ...

Astronomers capture a stunning galaxy collision, the closest ever of its kind   Sydney Morning Herald
HKU scientists find new galaxy closest ever to earth   ecns
Celestial firework marks nearest galaxy collision   The Times
Financial Express   
all 36 news articles »   


NDTV
   
Page out of innovation: A book that filters water   
Times of India
LONDON: The next time you want to get clean water, all you need to do is tear a page from your very own "drinkable super book". Scientists have created pages which are impregnated with bacteria-killing metal nanoparticles - a highly inexpensive, simple ...

'Drinkable Book' Promises to Filter Dirty Water   TIME
Take a leaf out of this book for clean drinking water   Times LIVE
'Drinkable book' could provide millions with purified water   RT
Christian Science Monitor   
Telegraph.co.uk   
Livemint   
all 153 news articles »   


Times LIVE
   
DNA set to replace the hard drive   
Times LIVE
The next challenge is to find a way of searching for information encoded in strands of DNA floating in a drop of liquid. File photo. Image by: Gallo Images/ Thinkstock. DNA could be used to store digital information and preserve essential knowledge for ...

Forget Hard Drives: DNA-Based Storage Solutions Can Last Thousands Of Years   Tech Times
DNA Data Storage Lasts Thousands of Years   Discovery News
Single DNA molecule could store information for a million years following ...   The Independent
Gizmodo   
Telegraph.co.uk   
Scientific Computing   
all 28 news articles »   


BBC News
   
City grime 'breathes back out' polluting nitrogen gases   
BBC News
Scientists say the grime which clings to urban surfaces "breathes out" nitrogen gases when hit by sunlight. The dark muck was known to absorb such gases from the air, but it appears the nitrogen does not stay locked away. In rooftop experiments in ...
SUNLIGHT releases smog-forming particles trapped on grimy buildings and streets   Daily Mail
Why sunny days turn urban grime into dangerous pollution   Telegraph.co.uk
​Grime on city streets becomes pollution in the air   CBS News
RT   
U.S. News & World Report   
all 19 news articles »   


Sydney Morning Herald
   
Central Asian glaciers thaw fast with warming in threat to hydro power, farms   
Sydney Morning Herald
Mountain glaciers in Central Asia have shrunk four times faster than the world average, threatening river flows vital for agriculture and hydro power from Uzbekistan to western China, scientists said on Monday. Global warming is likely to quicken the ...
Asia's Rapidly Shrinking Glaciers Could Fuel Future Conflicts   NBCNews.com
How Asia's melting glaciers could fuel conflict   Christian Science Monitor
Central Asia Mountain Range Has Lost a Quarter of Ice Mass in 50 Years, Study Says   Wall Street Journal
The Straits Times   
Tech Times   
all 33 news articles »   


Ledger Gazette
   
ISS Astronaut Shares Another Dazzling Northern Lights Video   
Huffington Post
If you think the Northern Lights look beautiful from Earth, take a look at this dazzling new video (above) from Scott Kelly. The NASA astronaut shot the video of a shimmering aurora borealis from his perch aboard the International Space Station -- and ...
ISS Astronaut Captures Spectacular Aurora Footage During a Sunrise (VIDEO)   Science World Report
Astronaut Scott Kelly captures northern lights in time-lapse video   TV Newsroom

all 36 news articles »   

沒有留言:

張貼留言