In The News: College of Sciences

ScienceNews

Its origin challenges assumptions about what causes these enigmatic signals

Giddy

Your genes govern appearance and blood type, but they're also responsible for a whole lot more.

Las Vegas Sun

A conservation group and a southern Nevada ski resort said Tuesday they settled a federal lawsuit that had blocked plans to put a mountain biking park on steep terrain that is home to the endangered Mount Charleston blue butterfly.

Mashable

Around the turn of the 21st century, a new age of galactic discovery began.

True Viral News

The telescope will be used to take unprecedented images of the deepest part of the universe. The powerful space instrument will devote a full quarter of its first year to peering at exoplanets in the Milky Way.

Gadget Tsuushin

According to the research results, the Be star is rotating at high speed, so that a part of its mass is emitted to the accretion disk, from which the neutron star can suck up matter.

Yahoo!

Alessia Franchini (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy) and Rebecca Martin (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) are studying a system of Be and neutron stars. increase. According to the research results, the Be star is rotating at high speed, so that a part of its mass is emitted to the accretion disk, from which the neutron star can suck up matter.

The Scientist

The International Committee on Systematics of Prokaryotes recently pulled the rank of phylum into its code of official nomenclature. Experts say the move will help standardize science in the long run but potentially disrupt research now.

Sierra Nevada Ally

Highlights from a Discussion of the Colorado River Basin and Glen Canyon Dam

Las Vegas Sun

When the James Webb Space Telescope gets into place next month about a million miles from Earth, it will allow scientists to see the light of distant galaxies and marvel at the origins of the universe.

IConnect007

A team of researchers has observed an unusual transformation in material under incredibly high pressure.

TopTenz

Not a year goes by that Earth's satellites don't find a solar system's worth of planets, stars, and other heavenly bodies that would be dismissed as ridiculous if a science fiction writer invented them.