🌟 #Welcome to #ScienceSimplified! 🌟
🔬🚀Are you ready to embark on a fascinating journey through the wonders of science?
🧬 Stay tuned for daily doses of scientific knowledge, mind-blowing discoveries, and inspiring insights. 🚀 Let's learn, grow, and explore together! 🌟🔍
Our Research Published in World Journal of Urology (@SpringerNature)
Thermal injury and treatment efficiency during thulium fiber laser lithotripsy: insights from an in vivo porcine model. 🔗 https://t.co/pgTPeqeP3o Grateful to Dr. @EzraMargolin and the @DukeUrology team.
Can trash become climate tech?
New research breaks down how waste biomass can be turned into biochar & bio-oil and when it actually makes economic sense.
@Biochar_IBI@ACSPublications@BiocharToday
🔗https://t.co/Fi64uf0DcO
BREAKING NEWS
The 2025 #NobelPrize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to Mary E. Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell and Shimon Sakaguchi “for their discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance.”
@SciGuySpace Worth noting that the heat shield tiles almost entirely stayed attached, so the latest upgrades are looking good!
The red color is from some metallic test tiles that oxidized and the white is from insulation of areas where we deliberately removed tiles.
View of Starship landing burn and splashdown on Flight 10, made possible by SpaceX’s recovery team. Starship made it through reentry with intentionally missing tiles, completed maneuvers to intentionally stress its flaps, had visible damage to its aft skirt and flaps, and still executed a flip and landing burn that placed it approximately 3 meters from its targeted splashdown point
You think Mount Everest is huge? Think again. Mars has a volcano called Olympus Mons that towers 2.5 times higher than Everest and is so wide it could cover the entire state of Arizona. It’s the biggest volcano in the entire solar system.
@Rainmaker1973 It’s nicknamed “The Raia” (the line) by locals and stretches about 1,214 km (754 miles), making it not just ancient but also one of Europe’s longest continuous borders.
@Rainmaker1973 They’re tiny marsupials from Australia that glide between trees using a skin flap called a patagium. Just like kangaroos, the babies (joeys) grow in their mother’s pouch before climbing out.
You know what: A tiny tungsten carbide ball (≈1 mm) sits at the tip. As you write, it rotates, pulling ink from the reservoir and depositing it evenly on paper. Ink is delivered steadily by a balance of gravity and surface tension, preventing blotting or leaks. BIC ink is oil-based, quick-drying, and resistant to smudging. It’s engineered to flow smoothly at room temperature but thick enough not to leak.. The hexagonal barrel prevents rolling off surfaces, and the clear casing lets you see how much ink is left.
@Rainmaker1973 This is an example of parasitism, when one organism lives inside another and takes its nutrients. Insects often carry hidden parasites like this.