Today, we are thrilled to announce that @science_bites is officially born! We are a network of #scicomm blogs. As we share the same concept, we've decided to officially come together under the #ScienceBites banner. Check us out now! https://t.co/64s0DYyQDd
From Roel Lefever: The title is slightly misleading: Io’s aurorae can actually be seen all around Io, not only at the poles. Anyways, how can these aurorae help us in improving what we know about Jupiter’s pizza-mimicking moon?
https://t.co/BUuvQZ9Cdm
From Megan Masterson: How can we use the demise of an unlucky star to learn about binary supermassive black holes? Today’s paper answers that very question!
https://t.co/VbW8VXi3Ls
From @lucasb413 and Emma Clarke: We interview Sarafina El-Badry Nance (@starstrickenSF), author of Starstruck, about her research, experience writing a memoir, and more! https://t.co/7XwrDs5zV5 https://t.co/7XwrDs5zV5
From @LambAstro: Betelgeuse, Betelgeuse, Betelgeuse: Is it (Supernova)time?
Will Betelgeuse go supernova in the next few decades? This paper suggests so…
https://t.co/pSqZOVMLzo
This week was World Microbiome Day! 🥳
The theme this year was Microbes & Food.
Read some yummy stories on MicroBites 👇
#Microbiomes4Life#WMD2023
https://t.co/mSarpu6tzH
Rats have been sailing the seas as long as people, moving from island to island with Polynesian explorers or across the ocean with European settlers. Rat invasions wreak havoc on island ecosystems and may negatively affect marine ecosystems as well.
https://t.co/zAzIOcHIEv
Temporal changes in food production and tidal currents in the surface ocean affect feeding behavior of deep sea corals, due to the reliance of deep water corals on dead organic material raining down from above.
https://t.co/f87L141ndO