The mission is conducting more than 35 scientific tests, mirroring the exploration vessels of the 19th century. Original Image Link Source:www.yahoo.com
This jumping spider mimics the movements of ant species in its environment to avoid being eaten. The spider’s predators, such as praying mantis, pass up anything that might be an ant to avoid the ants' painful bite.
Read the story: https://www.science.org/content/article/watch-spider-crawl-ant-avoid-being-eaten
Turns out blueberries don't have blue pigment. Instead, structural color from the waxy surface on blueberries gives them their signature color.
Video by Sarah Crespi
Footage: Middleton et al. (2024)/Science Advances
Music: Nguyen Khoi Nguyen
Published: 7th Jun 2024 04:00:11 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: After 50 years, Lucy faces rivals with other human ancestors
In 1974, paleoanthropologist Don Johanson and student Tom Gray unearthed a 40% complete skeleton of an early human ancestor, fundamentally changing the human family tree. The specimen acquired a nickname that persisted: Lucy, after the Beatles song playing at the fossil hunter’s camp--“Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.” At 3.2 million years old, some thought her species, Australopithecus afarensis, was close to when the ancestor of humans had split from the ancestor of chimpanzees. But in the past 50 years, discoveries of hominins both older and the same age as Lucy have pushed that split millions of years deeper in time, and challenged her position as mother of us all.
Read the story: https://www.science.org/content/article/was-lucy-mother-us-all-fifty-years-discovery-famed-skeleton-rivals
Published: 28th May 2024 05:23:04 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: Soccer-playing robots teach themselves to score
Developing athletic ability requires practice, even for robots. Using an approach driven by trial and error called deep reinforcement learning, researchers at DeepMind helped these soccer-playing robots develop skills, agility, and techniques to improve their play--all at a higher level than could be manually programmed. The computer “agents” controlling the robots picked up the rules and nuances of the game by observing human soccer players, then playing against each other in both simulations and using real-life robots. Robots play each other to improve their game, get computational “coaching,” and even mimic defensive moves of human players. While these athletic machines may not be making starting lineups anytime soon, computer scientists hope that this ability to learn and perform complex tasks in unpredictable environments will prove useful well beyond the soccer field.
Read the research paper here: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adi8022
Published: 6th May 2024 03:00:31 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: Why are these #frogs such clumsy jumpers?
Scientists have figured out why some miniaturized frogs from Brazil are such clumsy jumpers. A 2022 study published in Science Advances reveals that among adult vertebrates, members of the genus Brachycephalus have the smallest known semicircular canals – the part of the inner ear necessary for maintaining balance and spatial orientation.
The diminutive size of these canals results in low sensitivity to angular acceleration, preventing the frogs from controlling their posture as they prepare to land.
VIDEO CREDIT: RICHARD L. ESSNER, JR.
LINK: https://scim.ag/6bR
Published: 3rd May 2024 03:00:44 By: Science Magazine
Science News Video: The Moon That’s 2 Moons Stuck Together
In November 2023, NASA's Lucy spacecraft flew by the asteroid Dinkinesh and made a startling discovery: not only does this small asteroid have an even smaller companion (named Selam), that companion is shaped like a two-tier snowman. It's the first example of a contact binary satellite in the solar system!
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Published: 2nd Oct 2024 05:00:15 By: SciShow
Science News Video: We've Been Collecting This Fossil for 15,000 Years
Trilobites are one of the most iconic fossil animals out there. And people have loved them for centuries! Let's talk about the people across time and space who have loved collecting trilobites, from Elrathia to Calymene, going back thousands of years.
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A sustainable future requires leaders who benefit companies, societies, and the environment, and the Master of Sustainability Leadership equips you with the skills to lead initiatives and drive transformational change within enterprises. https://asuonline.asu.edu/online-degree-programs/graduate/master-sustainability-leadership-sustainability-leadership/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=video_paid&utm_content=sh-scishow-video&utm_campaign=02-sh_sustainability_leadership_msl&ecd22=02&utm_term=
For everyone out there trying to live sustainably, you might also want to consider the best way for your loved ones to dispose of your body after you're gone. Is a green burial best? What about human composting (where it's legal)? And can you really grow a tree from your decomposing corpse?
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You may have heard that redheads need less pain medicine, or that they need more anesthesia in surgeries. And both of those things are true! Which is weird. Let's talk about some of the stuff we know about what the heck hair color has to do with pain tolerance.
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Published: 28th Sep 2024 05:00:01 By: SciShow
Science News Video: We Finally Know What Causes Bad Trips
Most of the research on psychedelic drugs is focused on their therapeutic potential. But some studies have investigated a different consequence of these chemicals: bad trips.
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Published: 27th Sep 2024 05:01:05 By: SciShow
Science News Video: Take a close look at a fruit fly's neurons | Science News
In this fruit fly brain, there are precisely two neurons called CT1 neurons that span the width of the eye. Each of these neurons makes over 140,000 synapses and uses its unique position to help the fly sense light and motion.
Read more:
Video: Amy Sterling, Murthy and Seung Labs/Princeton University
Published: 2nd Oct 2024 01:53:07 By: Science News
Science News Video: Watch bacteria found on our teeth rapidly divide and grow | Science News
The filamentous bacterium Corynebacterium matruchotii, found in human dental plaque, has a superpower. It can divide into as many as 14 daughter cells at once, allowing it to rapidly expand its territory. In this video, a single cell divides into many, which also divide into many, and so on until the colony rapidly fills the field of view.
Read more: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/bacteria-unique-mouth-division
Video: Scott Chimileski/Marine Biological Laboratory
This animation shows how the ambipolar electric field works. The most abundant gas in the lower atmosphere, the part we live in, is nitrogen (N2, shown around seven seconds). Pan up to the ionosphere (14 seconds), though, and you’ll find more atomic oxygen. Photons from the sun can collide with oxygen and knock one of their electrons loose, leaving a positively charged oxygen ion behind. The pull between those ions and their lost electrons is the ambipolar electric field, which ties them together.
Read more: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/electric-field-in-earths-atmosphere
Video: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
With the recent boom in clean energy development, more and more farmers are interested in leasing their fields to solar power utilities, often forcing them to abandon traditional crop production or grazing in the process. Now researchers in the growing field of agrivoltaics hope to provide scientific insights and guidance to make it possible to produce food and power at the same time. While sheep grazing on solar farms has already demonstrated feasibility and ecological benefits, these researchers are discovering that co-locating crops and solar panels may prove to be a tough row to hoe.
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Production, Videography and Editing
Luke Groskin
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Ashley Yeager
Additional Video and Stills
Center for Energy Education (C.C. BY), Clean Energy Resource Teams (C.C. BY)
Enel North America, Getty, Innover, Kaan Kutural/UC Davis,
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Scientists can estimate how much more likely or severe some past natural disasters were due to human-caused climate change. Here’s how.
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Scriptwriter - Maria Temming
Story editor - Ashley Yeager
Host - Maria Temming
Producer - Luke Groskin
Fact checker- Kyle Planz
Reporter - Maria Temming
Images & video - Luke Groskin
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ESA, Getty Images, Nature Climate Change NASA, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio, NOAA, Pond5, Kevin Reed, Jason Smerdon, Michael Wehner and Park Williams.
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Centralia, Pennsylvania is a near-deserted ghost town with a 'fiery' past.
#ScienceChannel #MysteriesOfTheAbandoned
About Mysteries of the Abandoned:
The world's most incredible engineering projects are revisited to uncover why places full of mysteries and untold secrets are now abandoned ruins.
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Published: 1st Oct 2024 09:00:18 By: Science Channel
Science Channel Video: Fan Favorite: Hot Dogs | How It's Made | Science Channel
It's a love-hate relationship.
#ScienceChannel #HowItsMade
About How It's Made:
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Enjoy our random collection of randomness, randomly!
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00:00 Glass Paperweights - Originally aired 2010
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20:06 Steel Shipping Drums - Originally aired 2008
25:06 Digital Dentistry - Originally aired 2010
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35:06 Polyethylene Pipe - Originally aired 2005
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According to the Grand Tack model, Jupiter's journey through our early solar system may have taken some surprising 𝙩𝙪𝙧𝙣s.
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With a cast of experts and eye-popping CGI, we're looking under the celestial hood to tell the greatest story of all -- the story of where we and everything else came from.
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Mon, 30 Sep 2024 20:46:12 GMT The first flight in this mission is called Polaris Dawn and is set to break a number of important records. The mission was first slated to begin in late August, but due to weather ...
Sun, 15 Sep 2024 05:29:00 GMT Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more. The Polaris Dawn mission made history as it reached a higher altitude than any human has traveled in ...
Sat, 14 Sep 2024 22:56:00 GMT The Polaris Dawn mission, a groundbreaking private spaceflight endeavour, is set to conclude on Sunday with a splashdown off the coast of Dry Tortugas, Florida, at 1:06 PM IST. Over the past five days ...
Sat, 14 Sep 2024 02:00:00 GMT HMS Challenger, which discovered the ocean’s deepest point, is considered “the beginning of modern oceanography,” a scientific historian told JSTOR. Similar to Polaris Dawn and other ...
Thu, 12 Sep 2024 17:00:00 GMT Polaris Dawn had a busy first few days since launching ... But among the group's most important tasks are scientific experiments, including some from the Translational Research Institute for ...