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Astro Biology

Know How Origin of Earth's survived when Oxygen has Abundant - 0 views

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    We all are aware of the fact that billions of years ago, there was very little oxygen on Earth to breathe. Scientist of University of California at Riverside (UCR) have researched when in Earth's history oxygen may have abundant. Curious to know how origins of Earth survived?
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    We all are aware of the fact that billions of years ago, there was very little oxygen on Earth to breathe. Scientist of University of California at Riverside (UCR) have researched when in Earth's history oxygen may have abundant. Curious to know how origins of Earth survived?
Astro Biology

DNA Humble Beginnings As Nutrient Carrier - 0 views

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    New research intriguingly suggests that DNA, the genetic information carrier for humans and other complex life, might have had a rather humbler origin.
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    New research intriguingly suggests that DNA, the genetic information carrier for humans and other complex life, might have had a rather humbler origin.
Janos Haits

Portal:Astronomy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    "Astronomy is a natural science that is the study of celestial objects (such as moons, planets, stars, nebulae, and galaxies), the physics, chemistry, and evolution of such objects, and phenomena that originate outside the atmosphere of Earth, including supernovae explosions, gamma ray bursts, and cosmic background radiation."
Janos Haits

spsr.utsi.edu/ - 0 views

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    Society for Planetary SETI Research (SPSR) is an organization of scientists and scholars from a variety of disciplines formed around their common interest in anomalies on planets and their satellites whose origins may be the result of intelligent activity. The focus of SPSR research is primarily the surfaces of Mars and the Moon as revealed by orbiter and lander investigation.
Todd Suomela

[0904.0402] A thermodynamic basis for prebiotic amino acid synthesis and the nature of ... - 0 views

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    Of the twenty amino acids used in proteins, ten were formed in Miller's atmospheric discharge experiments. The two other major proposed sources of prebiotic amino acid synthesis include formation in hydrothermal vents and delivery to Earth via meteorites. We combine observational and experimental data of amino acid frequencies formed by these diverse mechanisms and show that, regardless of the source, these ten early amino acids can be ranked in order of decreasing abundance in prebiotic contexts. This order can be predicted by thermodynamics. The relative abundances of the early amino acids were most likely reflected in the composition of the first proteins at the time the genetic code originated. The remaining amino acids were incorporated into proteins after pathways for their biochemical synthesis evolved. This is consistent with theories of the evolution of the genetic code by stepwise addition of new amino acids. These are hints that key aspects of early biochemistry may be universal.
Kalyan Roy

GRB's: - 0 views

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    Gamma-ray bursts (GRB) are the most powerful explosions known in the Universe; most originate in distant galaxies. A large percentage of bursts likely arise from the explosion of stars over 15 times more massive than our Sun. Experts believe that...
Astro Biology

How Massive Geographic Change may have Triggered Explosion of Animal Life - 0 views

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    Scientist are researching about geologic history that may help to solve the riddle of the "Cambrian explosion," the rapid diversification of animal life in the fossil record. Learn more about what Cambrian explosion is and how it has affected animal's life in the past.
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    Scientist are researching about geologic history that may help to solve the riddle of the "Cambrian explosion," the rapid diversification of animal life in the fossil record. Learn more about what Cambrian explosion is and how it has affected animal's life in the past.
Sandra Flores

Fifth ATV's Georges Lemaître - 1 views

The fifth and final current proposed Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) of the European Space Agency will carry the name "Georges Lemaître". The Belgian theologian and astrophysicists is considered t...

started by Sandra Flores on 05 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
Kalyan Roy

Why Are Quark Stars So Strange? : Discovery News - 1 views

  • First things first, neutron stars, quark stars and black holes are all born via the same mechanism: a supernova. But each of the three are progressively more massive, so they originate from supernovae produced by progressively more massive stars. So, what if a star exploded, producing something a little too massive to be called a neutron star? Well, neutron stars resist collapsing under their own gravitational pull by a characteristic of matter known as neutron degeneracy. This produces an outward force called neutron degeneracy pressure. What if the neutron star born after a supernova is too massive for this neutron degeneracy pressure to hold up against the neutron star's own gravity? In this case, it's up to the quarks that make up the neutrons to take over, preventing the body from collapsing any further. Single neutrons are composed of three quarks (two "down" quarks and one "up" quark). When quark degeneracy pressure kicks in, a quark star may be produced; the free "up" and "down" quarks get converted into "strange" quarks. Therefore, a quark star (also known as a "strange star") is made up of strange matter.
  • Using what we know from the Standard Model of particle physics, a massive quark star may have enough gravitational energy to start 'burning' strange matter. The quarks inside the core of the quark star may be abused so badly by gravitational pressure that the quarks will be converted into pure energy and neutrinos.
  • The fascinating thing with this scenario is that the quark star matter will be so dense that even the neutrinos cannot escape. However, this release of energy and generation of neutrinos creates an outward pressure countering the relentless inward gravitational pull.
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  • Dai calls this extreme strange matter-burning quark star an "electroweak star"
  • Saving the best till last, the electroweak star's core would therefore be as extreme as the universe was only 10-10 seconds (that's 0.0000000001 seconds) after the Big Bang. These extreme objects would be like mini-Big Bang laboratories, maintaining a pressure where the electromagnetic and weak forces are so intertwined, they cannot be distinguished.
Todd Suomela

Particles Larger Than Galaxies Fill the Universe? - 0 views

  • But over the roughly 13.7-billion-year lifetime of the cosmos, "relic" neutrinos have been stretched out by the expansion of the universe, enlarging the range in which each neutrino can exist.
Maluvia Haseltine

Integral satellite disproves dark matter origin for mystery radiation - 0 views

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    More holes in the dark matter hypotheses
Sandra Flores

Back on The Ground - 0 views

Furnace starts trial operationThe German ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst is now back on the ground, the commissioning of an assembled by him on the ISS furnace for experiments in materials science, h...

started by Sandra Flores on 05 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
Todd Suomela

Does Time Run Backward in Other Universes?: Scientific American - 1 views

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    The basic laws of physics work equally well forward or backward in time, yet we perceive time to move in one direction only-toward the future. Why?
Sandra Flores

Back on The Ground - 0 views

Furnace starts trial operationThe German ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst is now back on the ground, the commissioning of an assembled by him on the ISS furnace for experiments in materials science, h...

started by Sandra Flores on 09 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
Sandra Flores

The origin of 'soft' gamma radiation - 0 views

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started by Sandra Flores on 09 Jan 15 no follow-up yet
Astro Biology

Extreme Ultraviolet Image of a Significant Solar Flare - 0 views

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    The sun emitted a significant solar flare which is classified as an X1.1-class flare. X-class denotes the most intense flares, while the number provides more information about its strength.
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    The sun emitted a significant solar flare which is classified as an X1.1-class flare. X-class denotes the most intense flares, while the number provides more information about its strength.
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