Pages

Friday, March 4, 2022

What were some popular theories about the origin of the Universe before we accepted the Big Bang as the best one?

What were some popular theories about the origin of the Universe before we accepted the Big Bang as the best one?


What were some popular theories about the origin of the Universe before we accepted the Big Bang as the best one?

Posted: 04 Mar 2022 09:11 AM PST

Where does the energy for capillary lift come from?

Posted: 04 Mar 2022 04:04 PM PST

I have a pretty fundamental question about MO theory in chemistry. What causes orbitals to be lower than others?

Posted: 04 Mar 2022 08:23 AM PST

What causes the Pi2P orbitals to be lower than Sigma2P in atom numbers 7 and below? Does the effect have a name?

submitted by /u/portirfer
[link] [comments]

Do Ants learn from their opponents?

Posted: 04 Mar 2022 02:12 AM PST

I've been watching some videos about Ants and I came to wonder: do ants learn from their victims? What I mean is, a slug is a hard opponent for a ant colony but if there's an certain animal they cannot defeat do they recognize said animal?

submitted by /u/WilkerkundTheLost
[link] [comments]

Does photosynthesis need time and/or energy to "power up"?

Posted: 04 Mar 2022 01:32 AM PST

Say for example you have a grow light on a tomato plant. You turn the grow light on for 1 minute, off for 1 minute, over and over. Does photosynthesis happen? Is there some point where this is actually causing the plant to loose energy through putting forth useless effort to begin photosynthesis?

submitted by /u/moocowincog
[link] [comments]

Does the weather on a given day have an effect on the weather forecast for the next days?

Posted: 04 Mar 2022 07:53 AM PST

I hope this question makes sense.

Let's imagine the weather forecast for the next 3 days shows this chances of rain:

• Day 1: 70% • Day 2: 70% • Day 3: 70%

So, if it actually rained on Day 1, would the chances of rain go lower for Day 2 and Day 3 or would they remain the same?

submitted by /u/Frosty_Naskot
[link] [comments]

How do we count STRs in a DNA test?

Posted: 04 Mar 2022 07:59 AM PST

When we run a DNA test in a sample to see if it matches another sample, my understanding is we compare the number of STRs in each sample, and the closer they are, the more confident we are that the samples came from the same person. How do we go about counting those STRs, and how accurate do we need to be in that count?

submitted by /u/GourmetThoughts
[link] [comments]

Do NSAIDs help soft tissue injuries heal?

Do NSAIDs help soft tissue injuries heal?


Do NSAIDs help soft tissue injuries heal?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 06:21 AM PST

A medical student that I know was the opinion that NSAIDs should be taken in the case of soft tissue injuries and that these help them to heal faster. If I look this up, most of the advice available on the internetz is actually to the contrary - inflammation is necessary for injuries to heal, and anti-inflammatories can slow down the healing process.

Which of these answers is true? The information seems pretty contradictory and the studies admit to a need for more investigation, there doesn't seem to be any consensus.

submitted by /u/Rumple28
[link] [comments]

Why does the Hawaiian underwater mountain chain make a huge turn?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 08:54 AM PST

Looking at the Hawaiian hotspot, the underwater mountain chain makes a large turn a bit before it disappears. Why did it make such a turn? Was it the hotspot or the plate? Do such big shifts in direction happen often?

submitted by /u/The_ArcReactor
[link] [comments]

If memories are synaptic connections in the brain, how are we able to learn/memorize things so quickly?

Posted: 02 Mar 2022 10:54 PM PST

As I understand it, synapses are neurons making contact with one another. So to make new synapses, the neurons would have to change on a cellular level. Surely this would take hours, or possibly days (or more) to happen.

So why is it, if (for example) someone tells me their name, I'm sometimes able to remember it immediately for a very long time despite only being exposed to that information for far too short of a time for my brain to physically change?

submitted by /u/19Ant91
[link] [comments]

Do birds cross breed? Is it possible for birds to cross breed like cats and dogs do? Or has evolution stopped this from occurring?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 02:39 PM PST

Is it possible for birds to cross breed, like dogs/cats do?

From my observations, I don't recall seeing any hybrid birds that may have been the result of cross breeding, like an owl with parrot colours.

Is this because of the evolutionary drive of these animals being so ingrained that they have no desire to cross breed?

Or are they unable to cross breed (does this make them different species)?

Or is there another explanation?

submitted by /u/delayedconfusion
[link] [comments]

How do you test the immune response integrity of a cell without killing destroying it?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 10:48 PM PST

How can you determine the most efficient gear ratio for an electric motor?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 07:33 PM PST

I am part of a robotics team and thought that it would be useful to find the relationship between gear ratio and the efficiency of a DC motor. When I looked it up I found plenty of graphs that represent the efficiency as a parabola, increasing as RPM increases and torque decreases, then dropping after a 'peak' efficiency is reached.

However, I couldn't find any explanations of why it takes this shape, or what determines the location of this peak.

My understanding was that speed is, well, speed, while torque is the ability of a motor to start moving in the first place. So I thought that the efficiency would continuously increase with speed, until the torque is too low to move the load and the motor stalls, dropping efficiency straight to 0 rather than a gradual decrease. Is there something that I am missing?

submitted by /u/Alex_Kimchi
[link] [comments]

Are charcoals in soils always a good thing? I.e. Biochars and post processing

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 08:40 PM PST

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YB9g9l5CjGk

Charcoals have polar surfaces with tremendous numbers of nooks and crannies and are found ubiquitously in the world's soils deposited from fire. These legacy structures modulate soil fertility, individual plant response, and subsequent large-scale ecosystem patterns.

In recent years, incredible attention has been paid to their use as a soil amendment - converting waste biomass into charcoals, "biochars" - dually capturing carbon and increasing soil fertility in managed ecosystems. Most data synthesis, including my own with Dr. Sean Thomas at Toronto, show on average ~41% increase in biomass responses.

Source: https://www.researchgate.net/publicat...

However, much variation ensues from the applied usage in agricultural and forestry contexts - including negative responses. The mechanisms that drive these detrimental effects are many. Still, research shows that low molecular weight leachates (i.e., acids, phenols, VOCs), Ash, and sometimes metals could be responsible for a mismatch in soil physiochemistry. Source: https://peerj.com/articles/2385/

This video discusses ways to enhance biochars efficacy and is delivered by my Ph.D. advisor - Sean Thomas, at the United States Biochar Initiative, 2020. An expansion of our work and what is written above follows in the talk. And his recent paper: https://link.springer.com/article/10.....

What do you all think? Any other biochar folks here to help weight in?

submitted by /u/altwormburner
[link] [comments]

Do woodpeckers get headaches?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 12:35 PM PST

As the title says, does the wood drilling have any health repercussions on a woodpecker? And also, is the skull built in such a way to prevent damages to the brain? Thanks!

submitted by /u/sauro97
[link] [comments]

Hi guys, I want to know if ovulation occurs by alternation between the two ovaries ?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 12:11 PM PST

Help me please

submitted by /u/juliams17
[link] [comments]

Why does the nuclear envelope reform during telophase 1, if only to be broken down again to continue prophase 2?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 05:30 PM PST

As a once-geneticist, I feel like I should know this answer, but I can't find anything on it. My only thought is to maintain some semblance of order as the furrow forms, ensuring that the meiosis 1 daughter cells obtain the correct chromosomes, but I would not be surprised if there was more to it. Teaching to inquisitive freshmen and juniors who I just know are going to ask me this, and I'd like to have a decent answer for them!

submitted by /u/ferrar21
[link] [comments]

Is it theoretically possible for someone or something to inadvertently launch themselves off of the moons surface and into space, or does the moon have enough of a gravitational pull to make this functional impossible?

Posted: 01 Mar 2022 10:44 PM PST

It's kind of something I've wondered for a long time, I've always had this small fear of the idea of just falling upwards into the sky, and the moons low gravity sure does make it seem like something that would be possible, but is it actually?

EDIT:

Thank you for all the answers, to sum up, no it's far outside of reality for anyone to leave the moon without intent to do so, so there's no real fear of some reckless astronaut flying off into the moon-sky because he jumped too high or went to fast in his moon buggy.

submitted by /u/Penakoto
[link] [comments]

AskScience AMA Series: I'm a comparative psychologist that helped octopuses, lobsters, and their relatives be recognized in the UK as sentient beings. (See video of my cuttlefish "marshmallow test" self-control study in description.) AMA!

Posted: 02 Mar 2022 04:00 AM PST

Hi! I'm Dr. Alex Schnell, a Research Fellow from Darwin College at the University of Cambridge. I'm a comparative psychologist interested in the behaviour and mental processes of animals. More specifically, I investigate learning, memory, and self-control in mainly cephalopods (e.g. octopuses and cuttlefish). My findings have contributed to our understanding of the evolution of complex cognition and how certain cognitive abilities may have arisen independently in invertebrate taxa. 2021 was a productive year. Two of my papers showing that cuttlefish have both self-control and what's termed "episodic-like" memory were the Royal Society's fifth- and sixth-most-talked-about papers, respectively. Watch VIDEO of cuttlefish pass the "marshmallow test" here!

I was also part of a team at the London School of Economics and Political Science that reviewed the evidence of sentience (the capacity to experience emotions) in both cephalopods and decapods (e.g. crabs, shrimp, lobsters). Our central recommendation, which is now being implemented, was to include both these groups of invertebrates in the UK Sentience Bill. This means, for the first time, these groups will be protected under animal welfare law.

My career purpose has been to further our understanding of the remarkable behaviours of animals in the hope that I might inspire more people to appreciate the incredible wonder of animal life on Earth. When people understand nature, they are more motivated to preserve it, research shows.

I joined the University of Cambridge as a Visiting Researcher in 2016 and became a Research Fellow in 2018. Prior to Cambridge, in 2007, I obtained a B.A. in Marine Science at the University of Sydney. In 2015, I completed my Ph.D. on the behavioural ecology of giant cuttlefish at Macquarie University. I then held several post-doctoral positions with my experimental research based at a leading cephalopod research facility, the Marine Biological Laboratory in Massachusetts. My postdoctoral research focused on different aspects of cuttlefish cognition including perception, learning, and memory. I also won a prestigious Grass Fellowship in Neuroscience, a program that supports early career researchers to bridge the gap between neuroscience and behaviour. I've also worked as a BBC series researcher for Planet Earth III and Life of Mammals II, and my work was featured in a NOVA PBS digital documentary on YouTube. Most recently, I worked for Wild Space Productions and Freeborne Media to produce a major new series for Netflix entitled 'Oceans.' My aim in these roles was to highlight new findings on animal behaviour to give the public a new dimension for understanding wildlife. I'll be on in the afternoon (ET), AMA!

Username: /u/novapbs

submitted by /u/AskScienceModerator
[link] [comments]

Why are anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibodies used for identifying certain IBD diseases?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 07:13 PM PST

Is the causal relationship for why anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibodies can be used to certain IBD diseases understood? Any current theories why there appears to be a relationship?

submitted by /u/ibrokeallthemarbles
[link] [comments]

Do whales use up air to sing?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 03:37 AM PST

It seems like it would be stressful and not advantageous for whale vocalizations to waste air. Do whales have to strategically decide whether or not to sing based on their air quantity or do they make sound some other way that does not use air?

submitted by /u/Goodmorningtoyou7
[link] [comments]

Could covid variants become antimicrobial resistant if antiviral pills are used widely by the general population?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 10:01 AM PST

I'm aware of the concern about antibiotics and drug resistance leading to a concern about superbugs. Does it work the same way for coronaviruses? If we use antiviral pills, could that lead to coronavirus becoming drug-resistant and more difficult to treat?

submitted by /u/anon62315
[link] [comments]

Why are earth’s natural resources seemingly not evenly distributed across the planet?

Posted: 02 Mar 2022 06:57 PM PST

I've been thinking about how certain countries are hotspots for either oil, cobalt, gold, diamonds, platinum, whatever resources. What happened during the earth's formation and the past several hundred millions of years of revolving around the sun, to where certain resources seem to be mostly concentrated in specific countries around the world?

Other than natural caves, why can't we simply excavate to the same depths and find the same metals in any country?

submitted by /u/GuitarProJon
[link] [comments]

Why is atomoxetine not considered a stimulant?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 10:08 AM PST

Please let me know if there is a better subreddit for this question. I am doing some research on medications for ADHD and found that there are stimulant and non-stimulant medications. Atomoxetine (brand name Strattera) is considered a non-stimulant medication, but when I looked into it's mechanism of action, I found that it inhibits reuptake of norepinephrine and may indirectly increase dopamine activity as well. It was my understanding that any drug that increases dopamine and norepinephrine activity is considered a stimulant, so how is atomoxetine not considered a stimulant? Can someone give me a more precise definition of stimulant that excludes atomoxetine?

submitted by /u/BicameralProf
[link] [comments]

What are smokeless/cold pyrotechnics and how's do they work? How do they compare to traditional fireworks for emissions and environmental friendliness?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 02:33 AM PST

Sorry if I've chosen the wrong flair!

submitted by /u/mynamechef
[link] [comments]

Why do dogs not lose all of their hair when going through chemo treatments, but humans do?

Posted: 02 Mar 2022 08:11 PM PST

Why can we remember having known something, yet not remember the actual skill/knowledge?

Posted: 02 Mar 2022 08:09 PM PST

What is the most abundant cell type in the body?

Posted: 03 Mar 2022 02:38 AM PST

I stumbled upon a statement in a hematology textbook (Rodak's Hematology) found in page 3 of its both 5th and 6th editions. It says that macrophages are the most abundant cell type in the body, much more than RBCs or skin cells. I got really confused and got no answers from internet that supports that it is really macrophages. So, is it really macrophages, RBCs, or skin cells?

submitted by /u/MedikaLab_DalubAgham
[link] [comments]

How long into humanity did it take before numbers were conceptualised?

Posted: 02 Mar 2022 08:04 PM PST

Been thinking about the evolution of communication between humans a lot lately and I was curious to see if anyone knows or has theories around how numbers came into the picture.

submitted by /u/Snoo-20921
[link] [comments]

Ask Anything Wednesday - Physics, Astronomy, Earth and Planetary Science

Posted: 02 Mar 2022 07:00 AM PST

Welcome to our weekly feature, Ask Anything Wednesday - this week we are focusing on Physics, Astronomy, Earth and Planetary Science

Do you have a question within these topics you weren't sure was worth submitting? Is something a bit too speculative for a typical /r/AskScience post? No question is too big or small for AAW. In this thread you can ask any science-related question! Things like: "What would happen if...", "How will the future...", "If all the rules for 'X' were different...", "Why does my...".

Asking Questions:

Please post your question as a top-level response to this, and our team of panellists will be here to answer and discuss your questions. The other topic areas will appear in future Ask Anything Wednesdays, so if you have other questions not covered by this weeks theme please either hold on to it until those topics come around, or go and post over in our sister subreddit /r/AskScienceDiscussion , where every day is Ask Anything Wednesday! Off-theme questions in this post will be removed to try and keep the thread a manageable size for both our readers and panellists.

Answering Questions:

Please only answer a posted question if you are an expert in the field. The full guidelines for posting responses in AskScience can be found here. In short, this is a moderated subreddit, and responses which do not meet our quality guidelines will be removed. Remember, peer reviewed sources are always appreciated, and anecdotes are absolutely not appropriate. In general if your answer begins with 'I think', or 'I've heard', then it's not suitable for /r/AskScience.

If you would like to become a member of the AskScience panel, please refer to the information provided here.

Past AskAnythingWednesday posts can be found here. Ask away!

submitted by /u/AutoModerator
[link] [comments]

Are geostationary satellites only around the equator?

Posted: 01 Mar 2022 01:06 PM PST

I assume the orbital planes of every satellite has to cross the centre of the earth, otherwise what are they turning around? And geostationary satellites are meant to stay still in the sky when you look up at them, right? But that only works around the equator otherwise the geostationary satellite would move up and down along a north-south straight line in the sky when you look at it from a point on the ground.

submitted by /u/RobbiRobin
[link] [comments]

Is it possible to construct a biconvex lens with an elliptical focal plane?

Posted: 01 Mar 2022 06:05 AM PST

Hi there,

Like the title says, I was wondering if this is possible. If so, how would such a lens look?

submitted by /u/AbyssalisCuriositas
[link] [comments]

Monday, February 28, 2022

What's the difference between a slug, a sea slug, and a nudibranch?

What's the difference between a slug, a sea slug, and a nudibranch?


What's the difference between a slug, a sea slug, and a nudibranch?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 01:53 PM PST

Why do emu have calf muscles when no other ratites or birds do?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 01:24 PM PST

What categorizes something as oil? Crude oil and olive oil are oils, but why not bees wax?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 01:01 PM PST

Looking at the molecular structures of all three and their properties, there look to be similarlies but obviously huge differences.

I'm just wondering how we classify things as oils and what are the criteria.

Crude oil clearly isn't "fat with unsaturated fatty acid chains" as most cooking oils would be described.

submitted by /u/PolskiOrzel
[link] [comments]

Can every non-metallic element eventually become metallic (Like Metallic Hydrogen) at high enough pressures?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 08:06 AM PST

So, I've randomly found out about metallic hydrogen and about how it forms metallic compounds ad 425GPa of pressure, so I'm wondering if any other (or even every other) non metal could do the same thing.

submitted by /u/GeneraleArmando
[link] [comments]

How does the current rate of Ocean Acidification & Effect on Marine Ecosystems compare to that of the K-T Extinction & Permian-Triassic Extinction events?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 11:47 AM PST

I have heard that oceans have acidified on average by 0.1 units on a logarithmic scale from 8.25-8.1 in the past century, with a potential further Ph decrease to 8.0-7.7 by 2100. At the same time, it is known that the current rate of Acidification is approximately 100x greater than typical rates of Ph change.

Taking into account the greater Ph changes in higher-latitude waters and the known biological effects of decreased Ph on different organisms, how does the current Ocean Acidification due to Fossil Fuel emissions compare to that of previous extinction events?

submitted by /u/wiz28ultra
[link] [comments]

Is my nervous system identical to someone else?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 01:38 PM PST

Like if a specific neuron is exactly in the same place as another neuron that's exactly the same.

submitted by /u/Bruhmella_offical
[link] [comments]

Is there a definition for bloating?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 04:29 AM PST

I hear people talk about being bloated and it seems kind of vague. Is it gas in the upper GI tract, gas in the lower GI tract, feeling full, feeling fat, or what?

submitted by /u/woburnite
[link] [comments]

Are there any pharmacodynamic interactions between fluvoxamine and atomoxetine?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 07:52 AM PST

I tried looking it up online but i couldn't find it myself, only pharmacokinetic interactions, which were very useful to find.

Thank you for helping.

submitted by /u/Ahmed_Reshah
[link] [comments]

What decides the shape and branching of the part which holds the grapes?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 07:06 AM PST

I recently ate grapes and a question crossed my mind. What decides at which angle and distance from each other, does different branches emerge of the part that holds the grapes? Is it the genes or what? Because I don't get these type of genes would evolve.

submitted by /u/AlterEgo_of_NoOne
[link] [comments]

AskScience AMA Series: Molecular engineering (MolE) encompasses everything from protein design, nanomaterials, vaccine development, battery/solar cell design, & much more. We're a group of students, professors & staff connected to the University of Washington's MolE Institute. AUA about MolE!

AskScience AMA Series: Molecular engineering (MolE) encompasses everything from protein design, nanomaterials, vaccine development, battery/solar cell design, & much more. We're a group of students, professors & staff connected to the University of Washington's MolE Institute. AUA about MolE!


AskScience AMA Series: Molecular engineering (MolE) encompasses everything from protein design, nanomaterials, vaccine development, battery/solar cell design, & much more. We're a group of students, professors & staff connected to the University of Washington's MolE Institute. AUA about MolE!

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 04:00 AM PST

We are graduate students, staff, and faculty from the University of Washington Molecular Engineering and Science (MolES) Institute. Molecular Engineering is a new field; we were one of the first Molecular Engineering graduate programs in the world, and one of only two in the United States. Though MolES only opened in 2014, we have had many discoveries to share!

Molecular engineering itself is a broad and evolving field that seeks to understand how molecular properties and interactions can be manipulated to design and assemble better materials, systems, and processes for specific functions. Any time you attempt to change the object-level behavior of something by precisely altering it on the molecular level - given knowledge of how molecules in that "something" interacts with one another - you're engaging in a type of molecular engineering. The applications are endless! Some specific examples of Molecular Engineering research being done within the labs of the MolES Institute are:

  1. MolES faculty member and Chemistry professor Al Nelson developed a new way to produce medicines and chemicals and preserve them in portable, modular "biofactories" embedded in water-based gels known as hydrogels. This approach could enable access to critical medicines and other compounds in low-resource areas.
  2. The Baker lab in MolES and Biochemistry is engineering artificial proteins to self-assemble on a crystal surface. The ability to program these interactions could enable the design of new biomimetic materials with customized chemical reactivity or mechanical properties, that can serve as scaffolds for nano-filters, solar cells or electronic circuits.
  3. Bioengineering/MolES Institute Professor Kelly Stevens developed a new 3D printing approach to create biocompatible hydrogels with life-like vasculature - opening the possibility of printing living human tissue for things like organ replacement!
  4. Researchers in MolES and Chemical Engineering professor Elizabeth Nance's lab are attempting to deliver therapeutics to the brain using tiny nanoparticles that can effectively cross the blood-brain-barrier in brain injury and disease.
  5. MolES PhD student Jason Fontana is working in the labs of James Carothers and Jesse Zalatan to develop tools that facilitate genetic engineering in bacteria for optimizing biosynthesis of valuable products.

Molecular engineering is recognized by the National Academy of Engineering as one of the areas of education and research most critical to ensuring the future economic, environmental and medical health of the U.S. As a highly interdisciplinary field spanning across the science and engineering space, students of Molecular Engineering have produced numerous impactful scientific discoveries. We specifically believe that Molecular Engineering could be an exciting avenue for up-and-coming young scientists, and thus we would like to further general awareness of our discipline!

Our panelists today consist of faculty members of the University of Washington MolE Institute, as well as PhD students in the MolE program. They are:

Faculty:

  • Alshakim Nelson (/u/polymerprof) - Associate Professor of Chemistry, Director of Education of the MolE Institute. Research Interests - polymer chemistry, biohybrid materials, stimuli-responsive materials, 3D printing
  • Neil King (/u/ProteinKing_MolES) - Assistant Professor of Biochemistry, Institute of Protein Design. Research Interests - protein design, self-assembling protein nanoparticles, vaccine design
  • Jeff Nivala - Research Assistant Professor, Molecular Information Systems Lab, Allen School of Computer Science and Engineering. Research Interests - synthetic biology, DNA data storage, nanopore sensing, single-molecule protein sequencing, machine learning for biological systems design, and cyber-bio security
  • David Bergsman (/u/ProfBergsman) - Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering, Research Interests - ultrathin nanostructures, nanocoatings, chemical separations, water purification, data science for material design
  • Doug Ballard (/u/uw-moles) - Graduate Program Advisor of the MolE PhD Program, MolE Institute Representative

Students:

  • Ben Nguyen (/u/nguyencd296) - polymeric drug delivery systems, polymer-drug conjugates, cancer immunotherapy, renal drug delivery
  • Evan Pepper (/u/evanpepper) - human microbiome, microbial evolution
  • Phuong Nguyen (/u/npnguyen8) - nanomedicine, neuroscience, biomaterials
  • Ayumi Pottenger (/u/errorhandlenotfound) - infectious disease, drug delivery, polymer chemistry
  • Olivia Dotson - nanomedicine, materials synthesis
  • Marti Tooley (/u/MartiTooley)- protein engineering, vaccine development, immune modulation
  • Cholpisit Ice Kiattisewee (/u/theicechol) - bacterial synthetic biology, CRISPR

We'll be on from 11-1PM PST (2-4 PM ET/19-21 UT), AUA!

submitted by /u/AskScienceModerator
[link] [comments]

Are the stars we see at night mostly individual stars or galaxies?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 04:49 AM PST

And follow-up: If they are individual stars, why aren't they part of galaxies?

submitted by /u/rrcjab
[link] [comments]

Is the acceleration of charges the only way to create EM-radiation?

Posted: 28 Feb 2022 06:24 AM PST

Even if the answer is only "yes", I still think it's relevant.

submitted by /u/neuromat0n
[link] [comments]

Why does the moon have so many impact craters? Has it been hit significantly more than Earth?

Posted: 27 Feb 2022 07:00 PM PST