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Science Explorer
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1 y

Full moon hazard: 50% rise in wildlife vehicle collisions during moonlit nights
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Full moon hazard: 50% rise in wildlife vehicle collisions during moonlit nights

The moon's impact on our planet, culture, and society goes beyond just affecting tides. Recent research by Texas A&M University, published in the journal Transportation Research Part D, indicates a 45.8% increase in wildlife vehicle collisions during a full moon.
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Saturday Citations: All that sparkles is plastic; woke tree diversity; the gravitational basin in which we reside
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Saturday Citations: All that sparkles is plastic; woke tree diversity; the gravitational basin in which we reside

This week, astronomers considered whether dark energy varies over cosmic timescales. Via neutron analysis, physicists revealed that some Early Iron Age swords were altered recently by swindlers in order to be more historically exciting. And a professor in New Jersey solved two fundamental problems that have baffled mathematicians for decades. Additionally, there were developments in children's crafting supplies, carbon sequestration and the shifting map of the universe:
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Google's sycamore quantum chip beats classical computers running random circuit sampling
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Google's sycamore quantum chip beats classical computers running random circuit sampling

A team of engineers, physicists and quantum specialists at Google Research has found that reducing noise to a certain level allows the company's sycamore quantum chip to beat classical computers running random circuit sampling (RCS).
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'Killer electrons': Lightning storms play cosmic pinball with space weather
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'Killer electrons': Lightning storms play cosmic pinball with space weather

When lightning strikes, the electrons come pouring down. In a new study, researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder, led by an undergraduate student, have discovered a novel connection between weather on Earth and space weather. The team utilized satellite data to reveal that lightning storms on our planet can dislodge particularly high-energy, or "extra-hot," electrons from the inner radiation belt—a region of space enveloped by charged particles that surround Earth like an inner tube.
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Ancient climate analysis reveals unknown global processes
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Ancient climate analysis reveals unknown global processes

According to highly cited conventional models, cooling and a major drop in sea levels about 34 million years ago should have led to widespread continental erosion and deposited gargantuan amounts of sandy material onto the ocean floor. This was, after all, one of the most drastic climate transitions on Earth since the demise of the dinosaurs.
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Researchers develop a laser that produces the strongest ultra-short laser pulses to date
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Researchers develop a laser that produces the strongest ultra-short laser pulses to date

The word laser usually conjures up an image of a strongly concentrated and continuous light beam. Lasers that produce such light are, in fact, very common and useful. However, science and industry often also require very short and strong pulses of laser light.
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Novel protocols for estimating Hamiltonian parameters of a superconducting quantum processor could improve precision
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Novel protocols for estimating Hamiltonian parameters of a superconducting quantum processor could improve precision

Researchers at Freie Universität Berlin, University of Maryland and NIST, Google AI, and Abu Dhabi set out to robustly estimate the free Hamiltonian parameters of bosonic excitations in a superconducting quantum simulator. The protocols they developed, outlined in a paper pre-published on arXiv, could contribute to the realization of highly precise quantum simulations that reach beyond the limits of classical computers.
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Study investigates very metal-poor star HE 2315−4240
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Study investigates very metal-poor star HE 2315−4240

Based on the data from the Magellan-Clay telescope in Chile, astronomers have performed a chemo-dynamical study of a very metal-poor star known as HE 2315−4240. Results of the study, published on the preprint server arXiv, yield important insights into the nature of this star.
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One of the earliest examples of a winged seed found in a mine in China
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One of the earliest examples of a winged seed found in a mine in China

A team of geologists, life scientists and biologists affiliated with several institutions in China has found one of the earliest examples of a winged seed in a mine in Anhui Province. Their paper is published in the journal eLife.
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In a first, Starship megarocket booster caught by SpaceX's 'chopsticks'
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In a first, Starship megarocket booster caught by SpaceX's 'chopsticks'

SpaceX successfully "caught" the first-stage booster of its Starship megarocket Sunday as it returned to the launch pad after a test flight, a world first in the company's quest for rapid reusability.
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