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Scientific American

Logo of telegram channel scientific_american — Scientific American S
Logo of telegram channel scientific_american — Scientific American
Channel address: @scientific_american
Categories: Uncategorized
Language: English
Subscribers: 3.61K
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The latest Messages 2

2022-05-08 17:23:13 Join all of the following NOW


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2022-02-08 05:57:08 What Is the Shape of This Word?

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2022-02-08 05:55:46 What Is the Shape of This Word?

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2021-10-05 11:47:42 ▬▬ ▬▬▬
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2021-09-18 08:16:52 A Car Crash Snaps the Daydreaming Mind into Focus


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2021-09-18 08:11:34 A Car Crash Snaps the Daydreaming Mind into Focus


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2020-07-26 13:38:33 ‍ Seismologists Find a Silver Lining to Pandemic Lockdowns

COVID-19-related lockdowns dampened human activity around the globe—giving seismologists a rare glimpse of Earth's quietest rumblings. Christopher Intagliata reports.

Humans are a really noisy species. Hammering and digging, flying and driving, delivering heavy cargo all over the world. And that activity creates seismic noise, which masks delicate signals from faraway small earthquakes.
Raphael De Plaen, a seismologist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, compares listening for small earthquakes during normal times to sitting at a wedding, at a table far away from the band. You can't really make out the music, because there are so many people laughing and talking in between you and the loudspeakers.
"And so now the lockdown is like coming during the rehearsal — no one is talking. So even though you're far away, the speakers are loud enough for you to listen to all the songs and clearly identify them."
De Plaen says he and his colleagues have been able to detect "songs" — in this case, seismic signals — they didn't even know existed. And now that they've identified those signals they'll be able to look back at decades of data and use these newly discovered seismic fingerprints to better identify small earthquakes like this in the past.
The study, co-authored by more than 70 seismologists from around the world, appears in the journal Science. [Thomas Lecocq et al, Global quieting of high-frequency seismic noise due to COVID-19 pandemic lockdown measures]
In addition to unmasking new seismic phenomena, the study also demonstrates how seismic data could be used to track human activity and movement — like traffic in a certain region, for example. And all without the privacy concerns that go along with cell phone tracking.
"By definition what we are observing is already anonymous — there's no way to actually know if John Doe has left his home to spend the night in another place."
De Plaen points out that this finding may be one of the only positive things to come out of the global pandemic — the ability to better detect future earthquakes.
— Christopher Intagliata



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2020-07-21 10:49:37 ‍ Hi, I’m Scientific American assistant news editor Sarah Lewin Frasier. And here’s a short piece from the June 2020 issue of the magazine, in the section called Advances: Dispatches from the Frontiers of Science, Technology and Medicine. The article is titled “Quick Hits,” and it’s a rundown of some noncoronavirus stories from around the globe.
From the U.S.:
A hiker found two rusted, unexploded bombs from 1935 on the Mauna Loa volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island. The bombs had been intended to help divert lava flow during an eruption.
From France:
Researchers report dinosaur footprints up to 1.25 meters long on the roof of a cave, likely coming from a type of titanosaur. Geologic processes buried and shifted the shoreline footprints to the cave’s ceiling, 500 meters deep.
From Kenya:
A 20-year experiment revealed that cattle-grazing areas frequented by elephants store almost twice as much carbon as areas that bar the animals; soil in these areas also has higher nutrient levels.
From Germany:
In a Leipzig waste site, scientists found a soil bacterium that can break down components of polyurethane—and survive the toxic chemicals released in the process.
In Oman:
Daily growth rings on a 70-million-year-old fossilized mollusk indicate that Earth turned faster at the time, squeezing 372 days into each year. The creature’s former habitat, a shallow seabed, is now on a mountaintop.
In Australia:
Seven new peacock spider species—including one with a van Gogh Starry Night–like design—were discovered among crowd-sourced photographs from across the continent. The spiders are known for their vividly colored abdomens.
That was “Quick Hits.” I’m Sarah Lewin Frasier.

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