setiinstitute, to science
@setiinstitute@mastodon.social avatar

https://www.seti.org/keeping-eye-comet-a3-next-naked-eye-comet-candidate
In early 2023, a new comet took stargazers by surprise. Called Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinan-Atlas), this icy visitor was discovered by two separate observatories in South Africa and China. Comet A3 had scientists and amateurs alike wondering if it would be the next naked-eye comet to light our skies. As 2024 unfolds, we eagerly anticipate whether Comet A3 will deliver the breathtaking celestial display we have all been hoping for!

ai6yr, to climate
ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

The low-carb, high-fat ketogenic diet comes with promises of weight loss, but a new study says it also has some serious health risks. In mice, a keto diet increases the buildup of zombie-like cells in the heart, kidneys, lungs and brain, which can accelerate organ aging and other health problems. New Scientist has more: https://flip.it/HNFJFR

jake4480, to science
@jake4480@c.im avatar
coreyspowell, to science
@coreyspowell@mastodon.social avatar

A mind-blower for a Friday evening:

This deceptively simple-looking graph is a spectrum of gravitational waves ringing through the Milky Way.

The waves may be caused by a chorus of supermassive black holes colliding all across the universe. Whoa!

https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.16227

ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

With extreme weather impacting all parts of the world, Climate Change isn’t going away anytime soon. These magazines keep us informed of the ongoing crisis, from the latest solutions like renewable energy to fighting misinformation, and beyond.

Climate Change: From stories about scaling up renewable energy to pioneering work in solar fuels to carbon capture and storage technologies, this magazine covers the burgeoning global shift to low-carbon economies.
@climate

Climate Change and Weather Misinformation: As the United States constantly battles natural disasters — from hurricanes to fires, and more — authorities are also fighting misinformation that is affecting their ability to do their jobs. Here, we will share links to articles about the falsehoods.
@climate

Climate Change and Wine: Documentating the effects of climate change on the wine world.
@climate

Climate Change Science: Bloomberg Green reports on the latest research related to climate change, including extreme weather events, ice levels, impacts to ecosystems, ocean temperatures, and more.
@climate

Environment and Climate Change: How can the world achieve inclusive economic growth while combating climate change and other natural resource challenges?
@environment

#FollowFriday #Science #ClimateChange

pomarede, to Kurzgesagt
@pomarede@mastodon.social avatar

A most fascinating sight. Captured yesterday by the ChemCam instrument onboard the Martian rover Curiosity, May 16, 2024 (Sol 4186).

Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/LANL

koen_hufkens, to science
@koen_hufkens@mastodon.social avatar

#Reproducibility in #science is not a purity test and there is plenty of epistemic uncertainty. But my oh my, the bar is LOW.

#peerreview #AcademicChatter

@academicchatter

setiinstitute, to science
@setiinstitute@mastodon.social avatar

https://royalsociety.org/news/2024/05/new-fellows-2024/

The SETI Institute is proud to learn that Science Advisory Board member Mike Garrett was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society yesterday. Prof. Garrett is the Sir Bernard Lovell Chair of Astrophysics and the Director of Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics (JBCA), Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester.

#royalsociety #science #scicomm

ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Millennia ago, Neanderthals and humans met, mingled and mated. And your health may depend on DNA from these long-lost ancestors. Live Science explains how "in some places in our genome, we're more Neanderthal than we are human.” https://flip.it/qiJdOD

mrillig, to Creativity
@mrillig@mastodon.online avatar

Is there an optimal 'scientific distance' for collaboration, and if so, how do you find it?

https://matthiasrillig.substack.com/p/is-there-an-optimal-scientific-distance?r=1yu2t7

drahardja, to science
@drahardja@sfba.social avatar

Ho boy. This is a bad take.

Presenting scientific consensus as “fact” is harmful, because it means that it will be harder to change that “fact” when more data is available.

Scientists are humans, but what makes their consensus trustworthy is their commitment to a process of forming testable hypotheses, gathering data, getting rid of confounding noise, and publishing their results. Thence, a model of reality is constructed, and a consensus—a belief—is agreed upon.

But NEW DATA MUST RESULT IN REVISED MODELS. That is good, and that defines progress.

Labeling consensus as “fact” undermines the idea that MODELS WILL CHANGE as more data come in. A “fact” is an immutable truth, and a reporting a change in scientific “facts” over time will undermine trust in scientists much more than the phrase “scientists believe”.

The problem with the phrase “scientists believe” is not the “believe” part. It’s the “scientists” part, which has lost public credibility.

#science #journalism #reporting https://mastodon.social/@arstechnica/112457986407944025

ScienceDesk, to science
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

Climate Change presents a range of dire environmental and health challenges. Add brain disease to the list. New research shows that as weather conditions worsen, certain brain diseases — stroke, migraines, meningitis, even Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s — follow suit. Read more from Science Alert: https://flip.it/RDG4WP

Flipboard, to news
@Flipboard@flipboard.social avatar

There’s a new playbook being written right now when it comes to the future of social media. The early-mover advantage is still in effect, and there’s a lot to figure out. Gone are opaque algorithms and the whims of any single company.

The fediverse represents a chance for quality journalism to shine again.

We talked to two leaders at fedi-forward publications — @TheConversationUS's @BostonAbrams, and @404mediaco's @jasonkoebler — about why they’re investing in the open social web, what they’ve learned so far, and their advice for other publishers just getting started.

https://medium.com/fedi-curious/lessons-on-the-road-to-reviving-journalism-via-the-fediverse-01b3748cacc5

NewsDesk,
@NewsDesk@flipboard.social avatar
skrishna, to space
@skrishna@wandering.shop avatar

Here's the newsletter version talking about the northern lights over the weekend, in case you were waiting for that! https://www.adastraspace.com/p/northern-lights-solar-cycle-solar-maximum


https://wandering.shop/@skrishna/112451694133448334

PBruce, to Health
@PBruce@mastodon.social avatar


Wilfully unvaccinated children are dying of preventable illnesses , while the parents claim parental rights and freedom to harm

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/measles-death-child-ontario-1.7207293

inkican, to physics
@inkican@mastodon.social avatar

A decade-long effort to build a machine to unlock the promise of nuclear fusion fell victim to budget constraints and competing science, and was shut down the day it was dedicated. It was never turned on.
https://www.beautifulpublicdata.com/the-mirror-fusion-test-facility/

FlockOfCats, to science
@FlockOfCats@famichiki.jp avatar

I don’t mean to Bragg, but here are the angles for coherent scattering of waves from a large crystal lattice

coreyspowell, to science
@coreyspowell@mastodon.social avatar

Uh oh. The ambitious European-Japanese BepiColombo mission to Mercury has experienced a worrisome "glitch" in its thrusters.

Engineers are scrambling for a fix so the spacecraft can enter orbit around Mercury late next year, as planned.

https://arstechnica.com/space/2024/05/europe-is-uncertain-whether-its-ambitious-mercury-probe-can-reach-the-planet/

Smootasaurus, to academia
@Smootasaurus@mstdn.social avatar

"The publisher has retracted more than 11,300 papers"

Wiley (the people who write textbooks) closed 19 scholarly journals after being plagued by AI paper mill problems. Short thread here since this article popped up in my reading feed today.
https://www.theregister.com/2024/05/16/wiley_journals_ai/

Smootasaurus,
@Smootasaurus@mstdn.social avatar

Wanted to add to this AI paper mill conversation because it impacts early career researchers more than anyone else, some to the point they can't break into their fields. #academia #research #science https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01437-2

plazi_species, to thailand
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
plazi_species, to China
@plazi_species@mastodon.green avatar
davemark, to science
@davemark@mastodon.social avatar

"Experiments generate quantum entanglement over optical fibres across three real cities"

  • Quantum Entanglement, where 2 particles are connected and affect one another even if those particles are light-years apart.

  • The demo used existing fiber cable, proof of concept that quantum entanglement can work in existing network

  • One experiment, in Boston, used fiber that crossed the Charles River 6 times

Huge leap forward!

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01445-2
#Science #Physics

pvonhellermannn, to random
@pvonhellermannn@mastodon.green avatar

Ron DeSantis Makes “Climate Change Isn’t Real” Official Florida Law

😆😭😡🤣
(went for emojis as lost for words!)

https://newrepublic.com/post/181622/ron-desantis-climate-change-florida-law

ChemicalEyeGuy,
@ChemicalEyeGuy@mstdn.science avatar

@GinevraCat @rzeta0 @pvonhellermannn “Chemical Eye 👁️ on Snapdragons 🐉 by Candlelight 🕯️” 👉 http://www.sitnews.us/MacDougall/011206_macdougall.html

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