RIP OAPL: An Academic Publisher Vanishes

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on RIP OAPL: An Academic Publisher Vanishes

A dubious predatory academic publisher called Open Access Publishing London (OAPL) seems to have died. Their website has gone down, taking some 1,500 scientific papers with it. What can we learn from this? Long-time readers will remember my series of posts on OAPL back from when I first investigated it in 2013. As far as I can tell, it was a one-man operation. The man turned out to be a Dr. Waseem Jerjes. Jerjes is a dental surgeon with many legitimate research papers to his name, and he was fo ...read more

The Human Brain Evolved to Believe in Gods

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on The Human Brain Evolved to Believe in Gods

My favorite stock image of God, from Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel (Credit: Creative Commons) It’s natural to believe in the supernatural. Consider how many people worldwide belong to a religion: nearly 6 billion, or 84 percent of the global population, and these figures are expected to rise in the coming decades. In the U.S., surveys show 90 percent of adults believe in some higher power, spiritual force or God with a capital G. Even self-proclaimed atheists have supernatural lean ...read more

The Five Brightest Planets Align in the Night Sky

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on The Five Brightest Planets Align in the Night Sky

This month, the five brightest planets in our solar system align and be visible in the night sky. (Credit: Derek Bruff/flickr, CC BY-NC) For the second time this year, the five brightest planets in our solar system — Mercury, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, and Mars — will be visible in the night sky at the same time. The planets will form a line that rises up from the horizon in the western sky and it will be easiest to see after sunset this Thursday, October 18. However, all month t ...read more

Hayabusa2’s Amazing Close Encounter With Asteroid Ryugu

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Hayabusa2’s Amazing Close Encounter With Asteroid Ryugu

Hayabusa2’s view of Ryugu as the craft descended towards the asteroid October 15, 2018 in the first of two touchdown rehearsals. (Credit: JAXA) This past summer, Hayabusa2 — a spacecraft, operated by the Japanese Space Agency JAXA, sent to collect and return asteroid samples — arrived at asteroid Ryugu. Today, the craft comes close to the asteroid in the first of two touchdown rehearsals. After reaching the asteroid on June 27, Hayabusa2 primarily observed Ryugu from “Th ...read more

Chandra X-ray Observatory Back Online After Failure; NASA's Still Working to fix Hubble's Gyroscope

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Chandra X-ray Observatory Back Online After Failure; NASA's Still Working to fix Hubble's Gyroscope

NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory went into Safe Mode on October 10. An investigation is underway to find the reason why. (Credit: NASA/CXC) NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory will soon be observing the cosmos once again, the space agency said Monday. A scare last week left the spacecraft in safe mode. Chandra is a space observatory that observes extreme objects that emit X-rays, like black holes. The problems with Chandra surfaced on October 10, just days after the iconic Hubble Space ...read more

The Fidgeting Brain

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on The Fidgeting Brain

A new review paper in The Neuroscientist highlights the problem of body movements for neuroscience, from blinks to fidgeting. Authors Patrick J Drew and colleagues of Penn State discuss how many types of movements are associated with widespread brain activation, which can contaminate brain activity recordings. This is true, they say, of both humans and experimental animals such as rodents, e.g. with their ‘whisking’ movements of the whiskers. A particular concern is that many moveme ...read more

What “First Man” Gets Fabulously Right About NASA: An Interview with Apollo 15 Astronaut Al Worden

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on What “First Man” Gets Fabulously Right About NASA: An Interview with Apollo 15 Astronaut Al Worden

Neil Armstrong (left) as portrayed by Ryan Gosling in First Man (Credit: Universal) First Man is not like other movies about the space race, and I mean that in a very good way. I’ll admit, I was skeptical about the director of La La Land telling the story of Neil Armstrong’s historic landing on the Moon. (Would there be songs? A scowling J.K. Simmons?) It turns out to be a synergistic pairing of artist and material. First Man brushes aside the expected saga of space cowboys saddlin ...read more

Visualization of Pacific ocean temperatures shows El Niño brewing, heralding possible winter weather impacts

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Visualization of Pacific ocean temperatures shows El Niño brewing, heralding possible winter weather impacts

This animation shows how sea surface temperatures have departed from the long-term average, from August through early October 2018. (Animation by climate.gov; data from NOAA’s Environmental Visualization Lab.) It’s still not here yet, but El Niño sure looks like it’s coming. In its latest forecast, NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center says there is a 70 to 75 percent chance that El Niño will form “in the next couple of months and cont ...read more

Spawning An Intervention

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on Spawning An Intervention

The D. lab corals, if they make it to adulthood, will have to survive in the world as it is: a world in which the climate is changing, the ocean is acidifying, and the forces of politics and history affect both land and sea. Curaçao, a former Dutch colony, became a separate country in 2010, but it remains part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, which oversees its foreign policy. For almost two centuries, the island was a hub of the Dutch slave trade, and like other Caribbean cou ...read more

The Jesuit Astronomer Who Conceived of the Big Bang

Posted on Categories Discover MagazineLeave a comment on The Jesuit Astronomer Who Conceived of the Big Bang

All of the galaxies we see in the distant universe are speeding away from us. This clue led Lemaitre to the idea of an expanding universe: the Big Bang. Credit: NASA/ESA/H. Teplitz and M. Rafelski (IPAC/Caltech)/A. Koekemoer (STScI)/R. Windhorst (Arizona State University)/Z. Levay (STScI) In 1927, a prescient astronomer named Georges Lemaître looked at data showing how galaxies move. He noticed something peculiar – all of them appeared to be speeding away from Earth. Not only that, ...read more

Page 852 of 1,119« First...102030...850851852853854...860870880...Last »