Category:Article: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 13:39, 29 January 2019
Recent Articles | Short Description | Analysis | Modification date"Modification date" is a predefined property that corresponds to the date of the last modification of a subject and is provided by Semantic MediaWiki. |
---|---|---|---|
The WorldâÂÂs First Nuclear Clock Is Finally Ticking | 13 November 2024 22:00:04 | ||
How Mathematicians Wrestled with the Biggest Controversy in the Field from Scientific American | 12 November 2024 22:00:05 | ||
Quantal phase factors accompanying adiabatic changes from Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences | 12 November 2024 22:00:05 | ||
How Geometry Revealed Quantum Memory from Scientific American | 12 November 2024 22:00:04 | ||
Earliest Merging Galaxies Discovered in New JWST Photos - Scientific American | Astronomers found two colliding galaxies dating back to less than 500 million years after the big bang | The discovery of these early well formed galaxies has disrupted the current cosmology. | 12 November 2024 21:33:00 |
Scientific American | Scientific American covers the most important and exciting research, ideas and knowledge in science, health, technology, the environment and society. It is committed to sharing trustworthy knowledge, enhancing our understanding of the world, and advancing social justice. | A trusted source for both science and news. | 12 November 2024 21:12:51 |
Artificial Intelligence (AI)-enabled Robotic Weeders in Precision Agriculture from NC State Extension Publications | NC Cooperative extension published an article on precision robotic weeders directed by AI. | Robots are becoming cheap and precise enough to work on small farms reducing the work and impact of weeding on more and more crops meoving beyond large row oriented fields. Generally though robots are still too large (and expensive) for us. A small solar powered raspberry pi permanently in the field moving around would be a better solution for us. I would burn the weeds versus precision herbicide. | 2 November 2024 16:27:00 |
The American Economy Is Rigged from Scientific American | Americans are used to thinking that their nation is special. In many ways, it is: the U.S. has by far the most Nobel Prize winners, the largest defense expenditures (almost equal to the next 10 or so countries put together) and the most billionaires (twice as many as China, the closest competitor). But some examples of American Exceptionalism should not make us proud. By most accounts, the U.S. has the highest level of economic inequality among developed countries. It has the world's greatest per capita health expenditures yet the lowest life expectancy among comparable countries. It is also one of a few developed countries jostling for the dubious distinction of having the lowest measures of equality of opportunity. | Wealth is even less equally distributed, with just three Americans having as much as the bottom 50 percent—testimony to how much money there is at the top and how little there is at the bottom. Families in the bottom 50 percent hardly have the cash reserves to meet an emergency. Newspapers are replete with stories of those for whom the breakdown of a car or an illness starts a downward spiral from which they never recover. | 31 October 2024 13:09:14 |
Trump’s Racist Rants against Immigrants Hide under the Language of Eugenics from Scientific American | 16 October 2024 21:50:48 | ||
The Early Days of Eugenics from Scientific American | 16 October 2024 21:00:05 | ||
... further results |
This category uses the form Header.
Pages in category "Article"
The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total.
'
A
B
F
G
H
- How does the Republican Party have more support from the working class than Democrats?
- How Does the World's Largest Seabird Know Where to Fly? 20240112
- How Geometry Revealed Quantum Memory from Scientific American
- How Mathematicians Wrestled with the Biggest Controversy in the Field from Scientific American
- How to Fight Back Against the Inhumanity of Modern Work 2022-10-16T09:15:04-04:00
- How Your Brain Tells Speech and Music Apart
I
M
N
O
S
T
- The American Economy Is Rigged from Scientific American
- The Cosmos Is Thrumming With Gravitational Waves, Astronomers Find 2023-06-29T14:13:54-04:00
- The Dream Was Universal Access to Knowledge. The Result Was a Fiasco. 2023-08-14T14:34:06-04:00
- The Early Days of Eugenics from Scientific American
- The New Code of Life
- The Webb Telescope Is Just Getting Started 2022-12-27T03:00:18-05:00
- The WorldâÂÂs First Nuclear Clock Is Finally Ticking
- Trump’s Racist Rants against Immigrants Hide under the Language of Eugenics from Scientific American
W
- Want a refreshed reading list? You got it.
- Where is Physics Headed (and How Soon Do We Get There)? 2023-01-24T03:00:11-05:00
- Who Will Have the Last Word on the Universe? 2023-05-02T03:00:11-04:00
- Wikipedia's Moment of Truth 2023-07-18T05:00:20-04:00
- Wirecutter: The Best Ductless Mini Split Air Conditioner