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Mammatus Clouds at Sunset: View 2 | Earth Science
Cloud formations called mammatiform clouds caused by downdrafts in a thunderstorm being lit by the setting Sun making the protruding clouds all the more obvious. Captured in grab shots from home with a handheld camera quickly taking several segments for a panorama. Stitched with Adobe Camera Raw. This set was taken a couple of minutes later after View 1, when the intensity of the sunlight was diminishing but the colours were still fine and rather pastel.

Credit: Alan Dyer
Location: Alberta, Canada
Alan's Website: http://amazingsky.net
Date: June 8, 2016

+Alan Dyer 
+TELUS Spark 
+TELUS Spark, the new Science Centre 
+TELUS World of Science Edmonton 

#Earth #Science #Sunset #Clouds #Mammatus #Atmosphere
#Weather #Photography #Art #Panorama #Alberta #Canada #STEM #Education 
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WOW is right! Great picture!
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Mammatus Clouds at Sunset: View 1 | Earth Science
Cloud formations called Mammatus clouds caused by downdrafts in a thunderstorm being lit by the setting Sun making the protruding clouds all the more obvious. Captured in grab shots from home with a handheld camera quickly taking several segments for a panorama. Stitched with Adobe Camera Raw.

Credit: Alan Dyer
Location: Alberta, Canada
Alan's Website: http://amazingsky.net
Date: June 8, 2016

+Alan Dyer 
+TELUS Spark 
+TELUS Spark, the new Science Centre 
+TELUS World of Science Edmonton 

#Earth #Science #Sunset #Clouds #Mammatus #Atmosphere
#Weather #Photography #Art #Panorama #Alberta #Canada #STEM #Education
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Scientists Use Iceland's Volcanic Rock to Turn CO2 Into Stone

#Science   #CO2   #CarbonEmissions   #Iceland  
Amos writes: Scientists think they have found a smart way to constrain carbon dioxide emissions - just turn them to stone.
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Alexander Biebricher

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#space:

Interview by ALMA-scientist with +Popular Science. Take this quote:

"It's super-cold gas bubbles falling out of a super-hot cloud and rushing towards a black hole at sixty seven thousand miles per hour, a billion light years away."

I keep saying: In astronomy, no hyperbole is necessary.

#space #science #ALMA #astronomy +European Southern Observatory (ESO)

http://www.popsci.com/scientists-find-new-kind-space-weather-near-black-hole?src=SOC&dom=fb
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University of Glasgow

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UofG SCIENTISTS SUCCESSFULLY TARGET LEUKAEMIA CELLS

New research, by UofG and The University of Manchester, has revealed an ‘Achilles heel’ of Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) and found drugs to successfully target this weakness. The results have potential implications for other cancers including acute myeloid leukaemia and brain tumours.

Professor Tessa Holyoake, who led the team from the Paul O'Gorman Leukaemia Research Centre, explains more: http://ow.ly/Jwwt3013Jgd

#Leukaemia   #cancerresearch   #UniversityofGlasgow   #UofG   #GlasgowUni   #Research   #Science   #TessaHolyoake   #Cancer   #Glasgow   #Scotland  
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Timothy Lau

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Meet The First Warm-Blooded Fish Known To Science


It's recently been confirmed that the opah, or moonfish, is fully warm-blooded fish, circulating heated blood throughout its body much like mammals and birds, giving it a competitive advantage in the cold ocean depths.

The silvery fish, roughly the size of a large automobile tire, is known from oceans around the world and dwells hundreds of feet beneath the surface in chilly, dimly lit waters. It swims by rapidly flapping its large, red pectoral fins like wings through the water.

Fish that typically inhabit such cold depths tend to be slow and sluggish, conserving energy by ambushing prey instead of chasing it.

But the opah's constant flapping of its fins heats its body, speeding its metabolism, movement and reaction times, scientists report in the journal Science.

That warm-blooded advantage turns the opah into a high-performance predator that swims faster, reacts more quickly and sees more sharply, said fisheries biologist Nicholas Wegner of NOAA, lead author of the paper.

"Before this discovery I was under the impression this was a slow-moving fish, like most other fish in cold environments," Wegner said.

"But because it can warm its body, it turns out to be a very active predator that chases down agile prey like squid and can migrate long distances."

Wegner realized the opah was unusual when a coauthor of the study, biologist Owyn Snodgrass, collected a sample of its gill tissue.

Wegner recognized an unusual design: Blood vessels that carry warm blood into the fish's gills wind around those carrying cold blood back to the body core after absorbing oxygen from water.

The design is known in engineering as "counter-current heat exchange." In opah it means that warm blood leaving the body core helps heat up cold blood returning from the respiratory surface of the gills where it absorbs oxygen. Resembling a car radiator, it's a natural adaptation that conserves heat.

The unique location of the heat exchange within the gills allows nearly the fish's entire body to maintain an elevated temperature, known as endothermy, even in the chilly depths.

"There has never been anything like this seen in a fish's gills before," Wegner said. "This is a cool innovation by these animals that gives them a competitive edge. The concept of counter-current heat exchange was invented in fish long before we thought of it."

The researchers collected temperature data from opah caught during surveys off the West Coast, finding that their body temperatures were regularly warmer than the surrounding water. They also attached temperature monitors to opah as they tracked the fish on dives to several hundred feet and found that their body temperatures remained steady even as the water temperature dropped sharply.

The fish had an average muscle temperature about 5 degrees C above the surrounding water while swimming about 150 to 1,000 feet below the surface, the researchers found.

While mammals and birds typically maintain much warmer body temperatures, the opah is the first fish found to keep its whole body warmer than the environment.

A few other fish such as tuna and some sharks warm certain parts of their bodies such as muscles, boosting their swimming performance.

But internal organs including their hearts cool off quickly and begin to slow down when they dive into cold depths, forcing them to return to shallower depths to warm up.

Satellite tracking showed opah spend most of their time at depths of 150 to 1,300 feet, without regularly surfacing. Their higher body temperature should increase their muscle output and capacity, boost their eye and brain function and help them resist the effects of cold on the heart and other organs, Wegner said.

Fatty tissue surrounds the gills, heart and muscle tissue where the opah generates much of its internal heat, insulating them from the frigid water.

Other fish have developed limited warm-bloodedness (known as regional endothermy) to help expand their reach from shallower waters into the colder depths.

But the opah's evolutionary lineage suggests that it evolved its warming mechanisms in the cold depths, where the fish can remain with a consistent edge over other competitors and prey.

Recent research has found distinctive differences among opah from different parts of the world, and Wegner said scientists are now interested in comparing warm-blooded features among them.

"Nature has a way of surprising us with clever strategies where you least expect them," Wegner said. "It's hard to stay warm when you're surrounded by cold water but the opah has figured it out."





New research by NOAA Fisheries has revealed the opah, or moonfish, as the first fully warm-blooded fish that circulates heated blood throughout its body much like mammals and birds, giving it a competitive advantage in the cold ocean depths.
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put it back in the water #catch&release
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Solving the Mystery of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot | The Atlantic
When NASA’s Juno probe reaches the planet in July, scientists may finally find out what drives the strange phenomenon.

Credit: +The Atlantic 
Release Date: June 1, 2016

+NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory 
+NASA Solar System Exploration 

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Jupiter #Planet
#Atmosphere #Storm #GreatRedSpot #Juno #Spacecraft
#Exploration #SolarSystem #JPL #USA #UnitedStates
When NASA’s Juno probe reaches the planet in July, scientists may finally find out what drives the strange phenomenon.
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Cool #science 4 your #FridayFeeling: #DYK Bumblebees' little hairs can sense flowers' electric fields? #pollinators http://n.pr/1UeluBL
The fields bend the hairs, and that generates a nerve signal, scientists say.
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We’ve all seen human body anatomical models and many of them are surprisingly affordable for schools and homeschool families (see Preschool-K5 here and Elementary age here) but I’ve come across SO many more amazing and unique anatomical models to enhance interactive learning. My kids LOVE touching things and taking them apart and these scientific models …
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A Gigantic Cumulonimbus | Earth Science
Heiko: "A gigantic lantern this morning at the German/Czech border—a fantastic cumulonimbus with lightning inside."

Cumulonimbus, from the Latin cumulus ("heap") and nimbus ("rainstorm", "storm cloud"), is a dense towering vertical cloud associated with thunderstorms and atmospheric instability, forming from water vapor carried by powerful upward air currents. If observed during a storm, these clouds may be referred to as thunderheads. Cumulonimbus can form alone, in clusters, or along cold front squall lines. These clouds are capable of producing lightning and other dangerous severe weather, such as tornadoes. Cumulonimbus progress from overdeveloped cumulus congestus clouds and may further develop as part of a supercell.
(Source: Wikipedia)

Credit: Heiko Ulbricht
Location: Freital, Saxony, Germany
Date: May 30, 2016

#Earth #Science #Weather #Atmosphere #Clouds #Cumulonimbus #Lightning #Planet #Freital #Saxony #Germany #Deutschland #Czech #Česká
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Wow 
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Sci-News.com

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ALLATRA SCIENCE

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It should be noted that, generally, such a notion as fatigue is not typical for the brain. You must simply understand how it works, switch from one activity to another timely and be able to change the quality of the states of consciousness at the proper time. Everyday life is constantly linked to the person’s psychological self-tuning, on which, incidentally, the overall condition of the body also depends.

From #AllatRa #book

#science #physics #brain #body
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How quality got lost as little science became big science, philosopher Jerry Ravetz peers under the bonnet of the crisis in scientific research.

-- How should we treat science’s growing pains?
https://www.theguardian.com/science/political-science/2016/jun/08/how-should-we-treat-sciences-growing-pains


#philosophy #science

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Science ABC

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Turned of at the wall or the apliance?
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Robert Caruso

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#Science  has a lot to say about what kind of #Content is best. In my latest post I break down the study on digital and non-digital content and how they differ with readers.

My Latest - Digital #Content Facts Win According To Science http://ow.ly/s3Ng3012NCj #contentmarketing
Digital content that is consumed by audiences via connected devices has impacted society in ways beyond the printing press. Removing factors such as cost, d
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Deep Stuff

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Scientists and engineers working at a major power plant in Iceland have shown for the first time that carbon dioxide emissions can be pumped into the earth and changed chemically to a solid within months–radically faster than anyone had predicted. The… #science  
Scientists and engineers working at a major power plant in Iceland have shown for the first time that carbon dioxide emissions can be pumped into...
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