Rocky extrasolar planets thought to be half frozen and half scorched might instead rock back and forth, creating large swaths of twilight with temperatures suitable for life.
Because of gravitational tugs with the objects they orbit, rocky bodies often settle into trajectories in which they always show the same face to their hosts. Such ‘tidally locked’ exoplanets would thus seem like bad candidates for life, since the hemisphere facing their host stars would roast and the dark side would freeze.
But a new computer model by Anthony Dobrovolskis of NASA Ames Research Center in California, US, suggests this is not always so. He finds that such planets can rock to and fro if they travel on elongated, or eccentric orbits, creating a ‘twilight zone’ that could be hospitable to life.
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Source: newscientist.com
Ancient remains including a 3,000 year-old stone circle and presumed place of sacrifice have been discovered near Vitemölla on Österlen in the far south of Sweden. The site extends over two hectares and is older and bigger than the region’s celebrated Ale’s Stones.
The site, presumed to date from the bronze age, is reported to be probably the largest stone circle in the whole of northern Europe.
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Source: thelocal.se
The owners of a trout farm were amazed a photographer caught their fish making an extraordinary escape on camera.
He pictured the trout making giant leaps out of their pond into a metal feed pipe three feet above the water level.
They then fought against the current for 30ft to the end of the eight inch wide pipe, which emerges underwater in a tributary of the River Itchen near Alresford, Hants.
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Source: ananova.com
Next time you sort through your holiday photos, maybe your dog could lend a hand. It seems dogs can place photographs into categories the same way humans do, an ability previously identified only in birds and primates.
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Source: newscientist.com
For years, no military program has sparked more fevered speculation from conspiracy theorists than the mysterious High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, or HAARP. And for years, the Pentagon has been pooh-poohing speculation that the enormous collection of transmitters, radars, and magnetometers in Alaska was some sort of superweapon.But, it turns out, the conspiracy theorists may not have been entirely off-base, after all.
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Source: wired.com