• Search in Site

Search in Site

Alaska Native News

  • HOME
  • Featured
  • General
  • World
  • National
  • State
  • Rural
  • Arctic
  • Science/Education
  • Health
  • At Sea
  • Politics
  • Weather
  • Tides
  • Entertainment
    • Daily Crossword/Sudoku
    • Comics
  • Opinions/Op/Ed/Letters
    • Op/Ed and the Editor
    • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • North Slope/Northwest Alaska
  • Interior Alaska
  • Southwest Alaska
  • Southcentral
  • Southeast Alaska
  • This Day in Alaskan History
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Science/Education
  4. /
  5. Page 245
Home»Archives»Science/Education (Page 245)

Colliding Stars Explain Enigmatic Seventeenth Century Explosion

By European Southern Observatory on Mar 24, 2015   Science/Education  

Some of seventeenth century’s greatest astronomers, including Hevelius — the father of lunar cartography — and Cassini, carefully documented the appearance of a new star in the skies in 1670. Hevelius described it as nova sub capite Cygni — a new star below the head of the Swan — but astronomers now know it by […]

UW Scientists Build a Nanolaser Using a Single Atomic Sheet

By Jennifer Langston | University of Washington on Mar 24, 2015   Science/Education  

UW Scientists Build a Nanolaser Using a Single Atomic Sheet

University of Washington scientists have built a new nanometer-sized laser — using the thinnest semiconductor available today — that is energy efficient, easy to build and compatible with existing electronics. Lasers play essential roles in countless technologies, from medical therapies to metal cutters to electronic gadgets. But to meet modern needs in computation, communications, imaging […]

Our Solar System May have Once Harbored Super-Earths

By Kimm Fesenmaier | Caltech on Mar 23, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

Our Solar System May have Once Harbored Super-Earths

Long before Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars formed, it seems that the inner solar system may have harbored a number of super-Earths–planets larger than Earth but smaller than Neptune. If so, those planets are long gone–broken up and fallen into the sun billions of years ago largely due to a great inward-and-then-outward journey that Jupiter […]

New research suggests insect wings might serve gyroscopic function

By Deborah Bach | University of Washington on Mar 20, 2015   Science/Education  

New research suggests insect wings might serve gyroscopic function

Gyroscopes measure rotation in everyday technologies, from unmanned aerial vehicles to cell phone screen stabilizers. Though many animals can move with more precision and accuracy than our best-engineered aircraft and technologies, gyroscopes are rarely found in nature. Scientists know of just one group of insects, the group including flies, that has something that behaves like […]

« Previous 1 … 243 244 245 246 247 … 390 Next »
  • Advertise with Us
  • Submit Press Release, OP/ED or Letter to the Editor
  • Contact Alaska Native News
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
© 2026, ↑ Alaska Native News