Go. Get. COVERED! Enrollment Started Yesterday And Ends December 15! Don’t Forget!! Please Ignore The

Go. Get. COVERED! Enrollment Started Yesterday And Ends December 15! Don’t Forget!! Please Ignore The

Go. Get. COVERED! Enrollment started yesterday and ends December 15! Don’t forget!! Please ignore the following hashtags. They are for the sole purpose of spreading this reminder further. #funny #friends #healthylifestyle #congratulations #halloween #naturalhair #makeup #me #meme #memes http://ift.tt/2iTXazP

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8 years ago
Magnetic hard drives go atomic
Physicists demonstrate the first single-atom magnetic storage.

Chop a magnet in two, and it becomes two smaller magnets. Slice again to make four. But the smaller magnets get, the more unstable they become; their magnetic fields tend to flip polarity from one moment to the next. Now, however, physicists have managed to create a stable magnet from a single atom.

The team, who published their work in Nature on 8 March1, used their single-atom magnets to make an atomic hard drive. The rewritable device, made from 2 such magnets, is able to store just 2 bits of data, but scaled-up systems could increase hard-drive storage density by 1,000 times, says Fabian Natterer, a physicist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL) in Lausanne, and author of the paper.

“It’s a landmark achievement,” says Sander Otte, a physicist at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. “Finally, magnetic stability has been demonstrated undeniably in a single atom.”

Continue Reading.


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7 years ago
It's Been A While, Right?? Well, It's Been An Interesting Year. We're In The Process Of Uploading All

It's been a while, right?? Well, it's been an interesting year. We're in the process of uploading all the episodes to vimeo. The first trailer is up. Go check it out again! Episodes are up weekly starting February 5. If you really want to help us out, please donate to http://ift.tt/2lqvuCQ #drunkscience #vimeo #webseries #science http://ift.tt/2FNIWrk


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8 years ago
8 Panel Mosaic Of The Full Moon About An Hour After The Partial Eclipse Ended Visit Http://spaceviewsandbeyond.blogspot.com/2017/02/8-panel-mosaic-of-full-moon-about-hour.html

8 panel mosaic of the Full Moon about an hour after the partial eclipse ended Visit http://spaceviewsandbeyond.blogspot.com/2017/02/8-panel-mosaic-of-full-moon-about-hour.html for more space pics


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8 years ago
The Juno Mission Has Been Revealing Angles Of Jupiter We’ve Never Seen Before. This Photo Shows Jupiter’s

The Juno mission has been revealing angles of Jupiter we’ve never seen before. This photo shows Jupiter’s northern temperate latitudes and NN-LRS-1, a.k.a. the Little Red Spot (lower left), the third largest anticyclone on Jupiter. The Little Red Spot is a storm roughly the size of the Earth and was first observed in 1993. As an anticyclone, it has large-scale rotation around a core of high pressure and rotates in a clockwise direction since it is in the northern hemisphere. Jupiter’s anticyclones seem to be powered by merging with other storms; in 1998, the Little Red Spot merged with three other storms that had existed for decades. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstaedt/John Rogers; via Bad Astronomy)


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8 years ago
If You Dropped A Water Balloon On A Bed Of Nails, You’d Expect It To Burst Spectacularly. And You’d

If you dropped a water balloon on a bed of nails, you’d expect it to burst spectacularly. And you’d be right – some of the time. Under the right conditions, though, you’d see what a high-speed camera caught in the animation above: a pancake-shaped bounce with nary a leak. Physically, this is a scaled-up version of what happens to a water droplet when it hits a superhydrophobic surface. 

Water repellent superhydrophobic surfaces are covered in microscale roughness, much like a bed of tiny nails. When the balloon (or droplet) hits, it deforms into the gaps between posts. In the case of the water balloon, its rubbery exterior pulls back against that deformation. (For the droplet, the same effect is provided by surface tension.) That tension pulls the deformed parts of the balloon back up, causing the whole balloon to rebound off the nails in a pancake-like shape. For more, check out this video on the student balloon project or the original water droplet research. (Image credits: T. Hecksher et al., Y. Liu et al.; via The New York Times; submitted by Justin B.)

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8 years ago
Time For Another Comic On Our Reddish Dwarf Planet, Makemake!
Time For Another Comic On Our Reddish Dwarf Planet, Makemake!
Time For Another Comic On Our Reddish Dwarf Planet, Makemake!

Time for another comic on our reddish dwarf planet, Makemake!

(Polaris is pushed for tomorrow ;) )

http://www.space.com/23122-makemake.html


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8 years ago
Pan-STARRS Solves The Biggest Problem Facing Every Astronomer
Pan-STARRS Solves The Biggest Problem Facing Every Astronomer
Pan-STARRS Solves The Biggest Problem Facing Every Astronomer
Pan-STARRS Solves The Biggest Problem Facing Every Astronomer
Pan-STARRS Solves The Biggest Problem Facing Every Astronomer
Pan-STARRS Solves The Biggest Problem Facing Every Astronomer

Pan-STARRS solves the biggest problem facing every astronomer

“The science that came out of it alone is staggering. Nobody has had as much astronomical data in all of history as what Pan-STARRS has produced. They’ve discovered about 3,000 new near-Earth objects; tens of thousands of asteroids in the main belt, approximately 300 Kuiper belt objects (about a third of all the Kuiper belt objects ever discovered), and imaged a total of more than three billion verified objects. For those of you wondering, there’s no evidence for or against Planet Nine in the data, but the Pan-STARRS data does support that our Solar System ejected a fifth gas giant in its distant past.”

If you want to observe the night sky, it’s not quite as simple as pointing your telescope and collecting photons. You have to calibrate your data, otherwise your interpretation of what you’re looking at could be skewed by gas, dust, the atmosphere or other intervening factors that you’ve failed to consider. Without a proper calibration, you don’t know how reliable what you’re looking at is. The previous best calibration was the Digitized Sky Survey 2, which went down to 13 millimagnitudes, or an accuracy of 1.2%. Just a few weeks ago, Pan-STARRS released the largest astronomy survey results of all-time: 2 Petabytes of data. It quadruples the accuracy of every calibration we’ve ever had, and that’s before you even get into the phenomenal science it’s uncovered.

Come learn how it’s solved the biggest problem facing every astronomer, and why observational astronomy will never be the same!


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8 years ago

When I post Slow Mo Guys videos, it often comes with a warning not to try this at home. For their latest video, that deserves an extra-special mention: seriously, don’t try this. In this video, Dan and Gav explode lithium-ion batteries. In the process, they discover a safety feature - namely vents on one face of the battery. Because runaway thermal reactions (a.k.a. explosions) are a possibility with this type of battery system, consumer-grade batteries are designed to try and prevent extreme damage. One of these outwardly visible safety features are these four vents that release gas when when the battery is too hot. By venting the gas, manufacturers keep the battery from exploding and sending hot chemicals and shrapnel in all directions. Instead the venting gas turns the entire battery into a miniature rocket. (Video and image credit: The Slow Mo Guys)

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drunkscience4u - Drunk Science
Drunk Science

The official page of Drunk Science! An enthusiastic host performs simple experiments and then humorously explains the science behind the result, all while visibly drunk.

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