ScienceDaily: Strange Science News |
- Purported phosphine on Venus more likely to be ordinary sulfur dioxide
- How heavy is dark matter? Scientists radically narrow the potential mass range for the first time
- Mira's last journey: Exploring the dark universe
- New light shed on behavior of giant carnivorous dinosaur Spinosaurus
Purported phosphine on Venus more likely to be ordinary sulfur dioxide Posted: 27 Jan 2021 11:01 AM PST Astronomers revisited and comprehensively reinterpreted the radio telescope observations underlying a widely reported 2019 claim that phosphine gas was present in the atmosphere of Venus. In a paper accepted to the Astrophysical Journal, they report that sulfur dioxide, a common gas in the atmosphere of Venus, is likely what was detected instead of phosphine. |
How heavy is dark matter? Scientists radically narrow the potential mass range for the first time Posted: 27 Jan 2021 11:01 AM PST Scientists have calculated the mass range for Dark Matter - and it's tighter than the science world thought. |
Mira's last journey: Exploring the dark universe Posted: 27 Jan 2021 11:00 AM PST Scientists used a supercomputer to perform one of the five largest cosmological simulations ever -- the Last Journey. This simulation will provide crucial data for sky maps to aid leading cosmological experiments. |
New light shed on behavior of giant carnivorous dinosaur Spinosaurus Posted: 27 Jan 2021 05:39 AM PST New research has reignited the debate around the behavior of the giant dinosaur Spinosaurus. |
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