Author Archive

China Reaches Moon and Takes Incredible High-definition Images

Written by www.physics-astronomy.com

While exploring the lunar surface, China’s Chang’e 3 lander discovered a new type of moon rock, and managed to snap THOUSANDS of high-resolution images of the moon.

For the first time ever, you can take a peek at the lunar surface like never before thanks to the sophisticated cameras located onboard the Chang’e 3, one of China’s most advanced lunar landers.

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Global Cooling, Not Warming, Life’s Biggest Threat

Written by Viv Forbes

Earth is a dangerous place.  Of all the species that have ever lived, over 95{154653b9ea5f83bbbf00f55de12e21cba2da5b4b158a426ee0e27ae0c1b44117} have already been extinguished by natural disasters.

Ice, not global warming, is the big killer, and this recurring calamity often strikes quickly. Thousands of mammoths and other animals were killed by ice storms, and their snap-frozen bodies are still entombed in ice around the Arctic.

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PAGES 2K ‘Hockey Stick’ Graph Validation Exposed as ‘Corrupt’

Written by Kenneth Richard

Image adapted from PAGES 2k, 2015

Five years ago, the release of the PAGES 2k Consortium (2013) “global” temperature data set was accompanied by a great deal of fanfare.

Advocates deemed the conglomeration of proxy temperature data from 7 land regions as scientific confirmation of the notorious hockey-stick-shaped temperature reconstruction popularized by Michael Mann and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, TAR) in the early 2000s.

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New Organ Discovery Could Help Explain Spread of Cancer

Written by Nate Church

A mysterious network of fluid-filled channels may be the key to how cancerous cells spread throughout the body.

Using advanced endoscopy techniques, a team of medical researchers expected to find evidence that the bile duct is protected by a wall of dense external tissue. Instead, what the discovered was a strange series of patterns. When they brought the results to New York University School of Medicine Pathologist Neil Theise, he immediately set to work, trying to explain what they were seeing.

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Study: Yeast In Vaccines Linked to Auto-immune Diseases

Written by Collective-Evolution.com

It’s well-recognized that the incidence of autoimmune diseases has been rising at an enormous rate. A study indicates that a significant factor in causing them may be the common bakers or brewers yeast, Sacccharomyces cerevisiae[1] used in many vaccinations, including HepB, which is given to nearly all newborn babies in the United States before they’re a day old.

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Ghostly galaxy may be missing dark matter

Written by Mary Halton

A diffuse fuzzy blob with other galaxies visible behind itImage copyright NASA/ESA/P. VAN DOKKUM
Image caption Hubble image: The galaxy is so faint that other spiral galaxies can been seen through it

An unusually transparent galaxy about the size of the Milky Way is prompting new questions for astrophysicists. The object, with the catchy moniker of NGC1052-DF2, appears to contain no dark matter.

If this turns out to be true, it may be the first galaxy of its kind – made up only of ordinary matter. Currently, dark matter is thought to be essential to the fabric of the Universe as we understand it.

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Report: Stratospheric Temperatures PAUSE over Last 23 Years

Written by Dr Benny Peiser

A new report from the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF) counters media hype over recent warm global temperatures, showing that almost all of the sudden increase in temperatures in the last couple of years was caused by a record strong natural El Nino phenomenon rather than global warming.

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Twenty-One Flaws with Wind Energy

Written by John Droz Jr

Trying to pin down the arguments of wind promoters is a bit like trying to grab a greased balloon. Just when you think you’ve got a handle on it, it morphs into a different story and escapes your grasp. Let’s take a quick highlight review of how things have evolved with merchandising industrial wind energy.

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Maybe ‘exceptional’ weather is just weather

Written by Anthony J. Sadar

Perhaps the best challenge to the hysterical claims that humans are causing unusual climate change is the demonstration that “exceptional” weather events can be predicted in advance based on their natural occurrence in history.

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40 New Studies: Nothing Unusual Happening in Climate Change

Written by James Delingpole

The scare about global warming is overdone, according to more than 40 scientific papers published in just the first three months of 2018.

What their charts clearly show is that “nothing climatically unusual is happening.”

In the chart below from a study by Polovodova et al, we see that 20th-century warming is perfectly normal in a long-term historical context. It was no warmer – indeed, is slightly cooler – than either the Roman Warm Period or the Medieval Warming Period.

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Surface Temperature: Sometimes Things Are Too Simple!

Written by Dr Jerry L Krause

If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.  Einstein

In (https://principia-scientific.com/dr-jerry-l-krause-how-stupid-am-i/, 1/18/2018) I wrote:

However, having grown up in northeastern South Dakota where the precipitation was commonly much less than that of Iowa, the result was that our relative humidity was usually significantly less than that of humid Iowa.  So I knew the reason for the warmer nights in Iowa was that dew generally formed on stuff there much earlier in the evening then it did where I grew up.  And sure enough this example of the greenhouse effect quietly disappeared.  And I forgot about dew.

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Experts Warn Of New Mini-Ice Age Approaching

Written by Martin Marcus

The east coast of the United States just endured a rare spring snowstorm.  How could this happen when NASA is constantly announcing that we have record high temperatures?

Advocates of the global warming theory have been predicting rising temperatures since around 1983. Available data indicated no such trend, so these advocates found reasons to adjust past temperatures downward.

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Stephen Hawkins: Doomsday Fearmonger

Written by Ethan Seigel PhD

Stephen Hawking lost his longtime battle with ALS on March 14, 2018 — what would have been Albert Einstein’s 139th birthday. While Hawking’s scientific achievements led the field of astrophysics forward in a number of important ways, his impact on the general public was much more of a mixed bag.

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Cornwall’s Wave Hub energy project yet to produce electricity

Written by BBC

Wave machineImage copyright CARNEGIE
Image caption Wave Hub said it was “disappointed” that Carnegie had decided to test its device in Australia

A £42m wave energy project off the Cornish coast has yet to produce any electricity despite being up and running for eight years. Wave Hub, an undersea electrical socket installed to test wave energy machines, has hosted just one device since 2010.

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Japanese basket pattern inspires new material

Written by BBC

Kagome metalImage copyright FELICE FRANKEL / CHELSEA TURNER
Image caption Artwork: the kagome metal is an electrically conducting crystal, made from layers of iron and tin atoms

Researchers have produced a metal with exotic electrical properties by mimicking a pattern from Japanese basket-weaving. Kagome baskets are characterised by a symmetrical pattern of interlaced, corner-sharing triangles; the pattern has preoccupied physicists for decades.

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