Kamis, 30 Desember 2010

Space: World's Largest Neutrino Detector Completed at South Pole

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Space
News | More Science
World's Largest Neutrino Detector Completed at South Pole
With 86 strings of detectors reaching down 2.5 kilometers into Antarctic ice, the IceCube observatory is now finished
By John Matson
Observations | More Science
Readers' choices: Top 10 Scientific American stories of 2010
Among the stories and features that visitors to our Web site clicked on the most this year is a guided tour to eight wonders of the solar system
By Robin Lloyd
Image Gallery
After the Storm: Satellite catches U.S. East Coast blizzard moving out to sea
A NASA satellite snapped a picture of the storm moving out to sea late Monday night, leaving behind a whitened landscape from at least North Carolina to New York
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Guest Blog | Space
Habitable and not-so-habitable exoplanets: How the latter can tell us more about our origins than the former
Planets that are very different from our own may be about to turn our theories about planet and solar system formation upside down
By Kelly Oakes
Observations | More Science
Why is the north magnetic pole racing toward Siberia?
The north magnetic pole drifts from year to year, but it picked up speed in a big way in the 1990s, bolting into the Arctic Ocean at more than 55 kilometers per year
By John Matson

Scientific American
January 2011
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