[ad_1] And Sebastián Viera saved the homeland. The Uruguayan, who suffered most of the game watching the crosses go from stick to stick, adjusted his level in the definition with shots from the spot and entertained Junior fans. stopping the first charge of Unión La Calera and promoting victory through …
Read More »The scientist joins the next adventure on Mars
[ad_1] Kirsten Siebach has to persevere a little longer, waiting for her ship to arrive. That ship is in space and is carrying a rover called Perseverance to Mars. And Siebach, a Martian geologist at Rice University, is now one of 13 scientists recently selected by NASA to help run …
Read More »Beverly Hills formally opposes the county order banning outdoor dining
[ad_1] BEVERLY HILLS (CNS) – Citing a negative impact on local business and a lack of scientific evidence, the Beverly Hills City Council tonight passed a resolution opposing the Los Angeles County Ordinance banning outdoor dining. The resolution requires a motion to be placed on the Los Angeles County Board …
Read More »The climate turning point may already be a reality in East Asia
[ad_1] University of Gothenburg The climate in inland East Asia may already have reached a tipping point, where the transition in recent years to unusually hot and dry summers may be irreversible. This is the result of a new international study by researchers from the University of Gothenburg now published …
Read More »Earth is much closer to our galaxy’s supermassive black hole than we thought
[ad_1] Earth appears to have been misplaced. According to a new map of the Milky Way, the location of the Solar System is not where we thought it was. Not only is it closer to the galactic center – and the supermassive hole in it, Sagittarius A * – it’s …
Read More »Foreign vs. Own DNA: How an Innate Immune Sensor Tells the Difference
[ad_1] Scientists from EPFL and the Friedrich Miescher Institute used cryo-electron microscopy to explain how a DNA-sensitive biomolecule that is key to our innate immune response is inactivated when it comes into contact with the cell’s DNA. One biomolecule that has garnered considerable attention in recent years is cGAS, a …
Read More »Faster Earth, closer to the black hole in the new galaxy map
[ad_1] Map of the position and speed of the Milky Way. The arrows show position and velocity data for the 224 objects used to model the Milky Way. The solid black lines show the positions of the spiral arms of the Galaxy. The colors indicate groups of objects belonging to …
Read More »Understanding the frustration could lead to better medications
[ad_1] Knowing exactly where proteins are frustrated could go a long way in making better drugs. This is one of the findings of a new study by Rice University scientists looking for mechanisms that stabilize or destabilize key sections of biomolecules. Atomic-scale models by rice theorist Peter Wolynes, lead author …
Read More »Former bottom piece of the Pacific Ocean taken deep beneath China
[ad_1] In a study that gives new meaning to the term “rock bottom,” seismic researchers discovered the underside of a rock slab of the Earth’s surface layer, or lithosphere, which was dragged more than 400 miles below north China. from the tectonic subduction process. A graph showing the convective heat …
Read More »The extendable sensor gives robots and virtual reality a human touch
[ad_1] It’s no exaggeration to say that extendable sensors could change the way soft robots work and feel. In fact, they will be able to try quite a lot. Cornell researchers have created a fiber-optic sensor that combines low-cost LEDs and dyes, resulting in a stretchable “skin” that detects deformations …
Read More »