Friday's test flight marks a major milestone for SpaceX as the company gears up to go public and to participate in NASA's Artemis III mission in 2027 http://spklr.io/6042EMKTE
Scientific American
Book and Periodical Publishing
New York, New York 99,916 followers
Awesome discoveries. Expert insights. Science that shapes the world.
About us
Scientific American, the oldest continuously published magazine in the U.S., has been bringing its readers unique insights about developments in science and technology since 1845. More than 140 Nobel laureates have written for Scientific American, most of whom wrote about their prize-winning works years before being recognized by the Nobel Committee. In addition to the likes of Albert Einstein, Francis Crick, Jonas Salk and Linus Pauling, Scientific American continues to attract esteemed authors from many fields: World leaders: former Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland of Norway, former United Nations Secretary-General Trygve Lie U.S. Government Officials: former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, former Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, former Secretary of Defense Les Aspin Economists and Industrialists: John Kenneth Galbraith, Lester Thurow, Mitchell Kapor, Michael Dertouzos, Nicholas Negroponte Scientific American is a truly global enterprise. Scientific American publishes 15 Editions Worldwide, read in more than 30 countries, with a worldwide audience of more than 5.3 million people. Launched 1996, www.ScientificAmerican.com has become dynamic resource for science news, including blogs, podcasts, videos, and interactive media. Visitors to the site also have access to Science Jobs, the career board for professionals in the science and technology industries.
- Website
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http://www.ScientificAmerican.com
External link for Scientific American
- Industry
- Book and Periodical Publishing
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- 51-200 employees
- Headquarters
- New York, New York
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- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1845
- Specialties
- science news, technology, environment, health, energy and sustainability, medicine, space, evolution, and physics
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Updates
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An outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda has global public health officials scrambling to contain the relevant virus, which the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned will likely spread further and cause more deaths beyond the more than 130 estimated fatalities so far. This type of Ebola-causing virus, a species called Bundibugyo virus, has no approved vaccine, is thought to be fatal in about 25 to 50 percent of cases and has sickened hundreds, including at least one American. http://spklr.io/6049EMBXx By Jackie Flynn Mogensen
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A study published this week in the British Journal of Sports Medicine suggests that the average adult should aim to get around nine to 10 hours of exercise a week—far above the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) guidance of 150 minutes a week—to see a substantial reduction in their risk of stroke or heart attack. But some cardiovascular and fitness experts say the new research needs to be approached with a healthy dose of caution. http://spklr.io/6049EM1uR By Claire Cameron
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The trend of attorneys getting caught citing AI-hallucinated cases points to a broader problem: instead of checking AI’s work, people keep trusting it http://spklr.io/6042EMJrK
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All that glitters is not gold, but gold sure does glitter, holding a shine far longer than most metals. And now two researchers have explained why. In a paper published today in Physical Review Letters, Santu Biswas and Matthew Montemore of Tulane University reveal the reason gold is harder to oxidize than similar metals. They key, they say, is the same chemical trickery that gives it a beautiful zigzag structure when viewed under a scanning tunneling microscope. http://spklr.io/6041EM1V7 By Joseph Howlett
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An astrophotographer teamed up with Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman to create these stunning new images of the lunar surface http://spklr.io/6047EMJKU
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Scientists are working to solve a mystery of Earth’s molten outer core, which lies more than 2,000 kilometers beneath our feet http://spklr.io/6041EMJ6c
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A surprising number of rodents captured during a recent study in the Pacific Northwest were carriers of the Sin Nombre virus, a type of hantavirus that belongs to the same family as the Andes type behind an ongoing outbreak that has so far killed three people and sickened several others. http://spklr.io/6042EM1sk By Adam Kovac
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Nearly 700 light-years from Earth, morning clouds make way for a clear night on the exoplanet WASP-94A b. Scientists discovered this gas giant more than a decade ago, but new observations from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) offer this weird world’s first-ever weather report. http://spklr.io/6048EM1jq By K.R. Callaway
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Bundibugyo virus is an uncommon species of Ebola-causing virus that has been linked to only two other known outbreaks http://spklr.io/6041EMyxU