Saudi Alyoom

Objects of survival and annihilation in light of climate change and the slowdown of the Earth’s inner core rotation

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Mysterious “sparks” on the Sun can help us predict solar storms.
The Amazon rainforest has degraded to a much greater extent than scientists previously thought, with more than a third of the remaining forests affected by human interventions, according to a new study.
The ant has no nose, but its sensors pick up the odor of cancer in urine..it has surpassed dogs and may become an easy and cheap tool in diagnosing malignant tumors..
The Earth’s inner layers and how they rotate and interact affect some geophysical observations on the surface, including changes in the length of the day and the Earth’s magnetic field. Can scientists monitor the rate of its rotation, which has slowed down recently?
Simulations by scientists have shown that when climate change directly causes the loss of one species, it leads to the cascading loss of many species that depend on that species for food, pollination, or other ecosystem services, and larger species are also at risk of extinction. more..
In this episode we also talk about the negative effects of genome duplication; Human cancer cells often mistakenly replicate their genome in the process of cell division.
This may result in further genomic disruption. In this regard, a research team conducted a detailed analysis of the first cell cycle after replication of its genome with the aim of shedding light on this phenomenon.
– We also meet a prominent mathematician and astrophysicist, Subramanian Chandrasekhar, who won the 1983 Nobel Prize in Physics with physicist William Alfred Fowler for theoretical studies of important physical processes in the formation and evolution of stars. His mathematical treatment of stellar evolution also yielded several current theoretical models for the later evolutionary stages of massive stars and black holes.

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