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Discover the best, curated science facts, news, discoveries, videos, and more! Chat with us: @EverythingScienceChat Contact: @DigitisedRealitySupport

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Page 47 of 85 · 1,014 posts

Posted Jan 23

The strongest solar storm in decades has created some stunning auroras over the last several days! Source: @dwisecinema @EverythingScience

672 views

Posted Jan 23

6 tips to kickstart your exercise routine and actually stick to it, according to science Source:Live Science @EverythingScience

599 views

Posted Jan 23

Mutations from Space Might Solve an Antibiotic Crisis Source:Universe Today @EverythingScience

622 views

Posted Jan 23

Space station crew credits ultrasound machine for handling in-orbit health crisis Source:Phys.org @EverythingScience

594 views

Posted Jan 22

2.8 Days to Disaster: Low Earth Orbit Could Collapse Without Warning The phrase “House of Cards” is often associated today with a Netflix political drama, but its original meaning refers to a structure that is inherently unstable. That idea is exactly how Sarah Thiele, who began this work as a PhD student at the University of British Columbia and is now at Princeton, and her co-authors describe today’s satellite mega constellation system in a new study released as a preprint on arXiv. Their choice of words is supported by the numbers. Across all Low-Earth Orbit mega constellations, calculations show that a “close approach”, defined as two satellites passing within less than 1 kilometer of each other, happens about once every 22 seconds. For Starlink alone, such encounters occur roughly every 11 minutes. In addition, each of Starlink’s thousands of satellites must carry out an average of 41 maneuvers each year to avoid collisions with other objects in orbit. At first glance, this may look like a carefully managed system functioning as intended. But engineers know that “edge cases”, events that fall outside normal operating conditions, are often what trigger major failures. According to the paper, solar storms represent one such edge case for satellite mega constellations. Under typical conditions, solar storms disrupt satellite operations in two main ways. Days away from irreversible collisions According to their calculations, as of June 2025, if satellite operators were to lose their ability to send commands for avoidance maneuvers, there would be a catastrophic collision in around 2.8 days. Compare that to the 121 days that they calculated would have been the case in 2018, before the megaconstellation era, and you can see why they are concerned. Perhaps even more disturbingly, if operators lose control for even just 24 hours, there’s a 30% chance of a catastrophic collision that could act as the seed case for the decades-long process of Kessler syndrome. Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience

647 views

Posted Jan 22

Shingles Vaccine Linked to Slower Biological Aging, Study Finds Source:ScienceAlert @EverythingScience

601 views

Posted Jan 22

Evidence of 'lightning-fast' evolution found after Chicxulub impact Source:Phys.org @EverythingScience

623 views

Posted Jan 22

Loud and clear: Curiosity and Perseverance are both back in touch with Earth following solar conjunction. They’re beginning to downlink data collected while the Sun was blocking the signal path between us and the Red Planet. Keep up with the latest at science.nasa.gov/mars/ Source: @NASAMars @EverythingScience

609 views

Posted Jan 22

Mysterious Giants Could Be a Whole New Kind of Life That No Longer Exists Ever since their discovery more than 165 years ago, massive fossilized structures left by an organism known as Prototaxiteshave proven impossible to categorize. Researchers in the UK have suggested in a recently published study that there's a very good reason these oddities don't fit neatly on the tree of life – they belong to a branch all of their own, with no modern equivalent. Some 400 million years ago, the swamps of the late Silurian period would have sprouted a mix of horsetails, ferns, and other prototype plants that look positively alien today. Among them stretched 8-meter (26-foot) tall towers that defy easy identification. Wide and branchless, these organisms may have been a form of algae or ancient conifer, researchers suspect, based on what little evidence remains. Source:ScienceAlert @EverythingScience

603 views

Posted Jan 21

New Drug Slashes Dangerous Blood Fats by Nearly 40% in First Human Trial Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience

620 views

Posted Jan 21

This Immune Therapy Repaired Gut Damage for a Full Year Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience

624 views

Posted Jan 21

The most underappreciated achievement in theoretical physics It’s true that there are a lot of different theoretical proposals that serve as alternatives or extensions to mainstream physics: string theory, supersymmetry, Gauss-Bonnet gravity, GUTs, and much more. Many point to the success of our standard picture of reality, based on Einstein’s general relativity and the quantum field theory of the Standard Model, and (prematurely) dismiss all such alternative explorations. However, a tremendous amount of progress has been made simply by constraining and ruling out many such alternatives and extensions through data-driven experiments and observations. That progress is underappreciated, representing a huge achievement whenever it occurs. Source:Big Think @EverythingScience

662 views
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