eARTh: A portrait of our planet painted with photons

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When I first saw this beautiful remote sensing image, I couldn't help but feel that I was looking at a painting by an abstract expressionist. Starting in the 1940s, abstract expressionists like Jackson Pollack and Clyfford Still "valued spontaneity and improvisation, and they accorded the highest importance to process," writes Stella Paul of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. These artists placed "an emphasis on dynamic, energetic gesture," she notes. Their works also were p ...read more

Fight the flu, then prepare for Citizen Science Day!

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Fight the flu, monitor mouth microbes, and prepare for Citizen Science Day! Flu Near You How are you feeling? If you can answer that question, you can answer a very quick weekly survey to tell researchers if you're feeling sick or not. This effort helps inform scientists on where the flu is around the world, check out the results on the map to see if the flu is, in fact, near you! Get started! Location: Online Only ...read more

Success Comes Down to Skill — And a Lot of Luck

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Is it better to be lucky or good? Well, it's a trick question — you actually need both if you want to be successful. In an admittedly simplistic model, researchers from Italy's University of Catania, looked at whether talented individuals or those blessed with luck rose to the top. Though they found it took a bit of both, the distribution wasn't even. The most successful people weren't the most talented — they were simply the luckiest. Keep That Rabbit's Foot Their work was inspired ...read more

Snowpack declines in the western U.S. are comparable to all of the water stored the West’s largest reservoir

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Thanks in large measure to warming temperatures, the average snowpack in U.S. western states has dropped by 15 to 30 percent since 1915. The water in that lost snowpack is comparable in volume to Lake Mead. With a maximum capacity of 9.3 trillion gallons, Mead is the West’s largest manmade reservoir. The new data on snowpack declines are among the striking results of a study led by Philip Mote, director of the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute at Oreg ...read more

Scientific Salami Slicing: 33 Papers from 1 Study

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"Salami slicing" refers to the practice of breaking scientific studies down into small chunks and publishing each part as a seperate paper. Given that scientists are judged in large part by the number of peer-reviewed papers they produce, it's easy to understand the temptation to engage in salami publication. It's officialy discouraged, but it's still very common to see researchers writing perhaps 3 or 4 papers based on a single project that could, realistically, have been one big paper. ...read more

Fingerprinting the Very First Stars

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When solving a crime, detectives don’t always have access to footage or photographs of their suspect. Instead, the detectives have to painstakingly search for small, easily overlooked clues — such as fingerprints. Like detectives, astronomers don’t always have the option of simply examining an image when they want to solve a mystery. Instead, astronomers usually must meticulously piece together tiny bits of evidence, often by scouring the heavens to hunt for clues. And one of ...read more

Your Weekly Attenborough: Polioptila attenboroughi

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Bro, what even is a species? I've been writing about various species for a while now, and this latest Attenborough is really throwing me for a loop. It's a kind of small bird from the Amazon called a gnatcatcher. They're a kind of small songbird related to wrens, and they feast on insects with small, sharp beaks—in between warbling out their songs, I imagine. And it's most likely a new species. But the researchers in charge of deciding weren't all that sure. Because we don't ha ...read more

In satellite imagery, the dangerous nor’easter battering the U.S. East Coast is a beastly beauty of a storm

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A nor'easter with winds ranging up to hurricane strength is causing misery along much of the U.S. East Coast today. But from space, it's a strangely beautiful sight to behold. The fierce storm is causing flooding, power outages, suspension of Amtrak rail service, and hundreds of delayed or cancelled flights in and out of area airports. New York's LaGuardia airport has closed down completely due to high winds. The storm may even turn out to be more damaging than th ...read more

What’s It Look Like on the Doorstep of a Supermassive Black Hole?

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Supermassive black holes sit in the centers of all massive galaxies. Many of these giants are actively accreting material, earning them the name active galactic nuclei or AGN. As material falls in toward the black hole, it creates a disk that shines brightly and can even generate huge outbursts and jets. Compared with a galaxy hundreds of thousands of light-years across, the accretion disk around a supermassive black hole and the dusty structure that surrounds it are extremely small — on t ...read more

We’ll Be Chowing Down Electronics in No Time

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With the growing encroachment of Big Data and the Internet of Things and other digital buzzwords on our daily lives, it should be no shock that we’re now on the verge of literally eating the latest advance in electronics. It’s actually pretty neat. According to a study this week in ACS Nano, chemists have learned how to imbue a laser-branded conductive pattern onto anything containing carbon, including your dinner. Certified Organic Chemistry It’s all thanks to graphene, a pre ...read more

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