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19
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  • Tropical Forest Reserves Slow Down Global Warming

    National parks and nature reserves in South America, Africa and Asia, created to protect wildlife, heritage sites and the territory of indigenous people, are reducing carbon emissions from tropical deforestation by a third, and so are slowing the rate of global warming, a new study shows.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA Finds Winds Shear Still Affecting Tropical Storm Saola

    NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite and NASA's Aqua satellite imagery showed wind shear was still affecting Tropical Storm Saola.as it moved through the Philippine Sea.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA Finds New Tropical Storm Selma Has Heavy Rain-making Potential

    Tropical Storm Selma formed in the Eastern Pacific Ocean off the coast of El Salvador and NASA infrared satellite imagery revealed the storm has very cold cloud top temperatures indicating the potential for heavy rain.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • September 2017's Intense Solar Activity Viewed From Space

    September 2017 saw a spate of solar activity, with the Sun emitting 27 M-class and four X-class flares and releasing several powerful coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, between Sept. 6-10. Solar flares are powerful bursts of radiation, while coronal mass ejections are massive clouds of solar material and magnetic fields that erupt from the Sun at incredible speeds.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • New technology capable of converting waste into bio-energy coming to University of Alberta

    A shipping container-sized pilot plant that can process a variety of wastes into valuable biofuels will be shipped from Germany to Edmonton thanks to a new future energy research collaboration between the University of Alberta and Germany’s Fraunhofer Society.

    The plant, known as Biobattery, uses thermo-catalytic reforming (TCR) technology developed by Fraunhofer bioengineering researcher Andreas Hornung to process a variety of wastes into three valuable products––bio-oil, char and gases––at a rate of 30 kilograms per hour.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Deforestation Linked to Palm Oil Production is Making Indonesia Warmer

    In the past decades, large areas of forest in Sumatra, Indonesia have been replaced by cash crops like oil palm and rubber plantations. New research, published in the European Geosciences Union journal Biogeosciences, shows that these changes in land use increase temperatures in the region. The added warming could affect plants and animals and make parts of the country more vulnerable to wildfires.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA Finds Heavy Rain, Wind Shear and Towering Clouds in Tropical Storm Saola

    NASA satellites have provided various views of Tropical Storm Saola as it tracks toward Japan in the northwestern Pacific Ocean. The GPM and Suomi NPP satellites found heavy rainfall, towering thunderstorms and a tropical cyclone still being affected by vertical wind shear.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Sussex Physicists Have Breakthrough on Brittle Smartphone Screens

    Scientists at the University of Sussex may have found a solution to the long-standing problem of brittle smartphone screens.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Discovery Lights Path for Alzheimer's Research

    A probe invented at Rice University that lights up when it binds to a misfolded amyloid beta peptide — the kind suspected of causing Alzheimer’s disease — has identified a specific binding site on the protein that could facilitate better drugs to treat the disease.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • New Fractal-Like Concentrating Solar Power Receivers Are Better at Absorbing Sunlight

    Sandia National Laboratories engineers have developed new fractal-like, concentrating solar power receivers for small- to medium-scale use that are up to 20 percent more effective at absorbing sunlight than current technology.

    >> Read the Full Article

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