In fact, what the team found after looking at 16,000 biosignature candidate chemicals (as well as the detailed properties of phosphine) was that the stinky molecule is only produced by bacteria and microbes under conditions found on an Earthlike planet. Not even lightning or plate tectonics can produce it in any quantity.
And here's another article:
What did Messi do in 2019?
The vote had been extremely close, Virgil van Dijk seven points behind. The same Van Dijk who after the Champions League final had said: "I don't think there's any case [for me]. Messi is the best." Asked once for his all-time top five, Jürgen Klopp wouldn't name them all, but said the Argentinian was No 1. This year, he is ours as well.
What did Messi do? He has played better than anyone else in 2019. Maybe he has played better than anyone else, full stop. And in the play, he is peerless. For all the tangibles, the astonishing stats, it's not always tangible. A better measure of Messi might be sought in Simeone and reactions like his – in the men around Messi who comprehend him through competition.
100 red objects in deep space have mysteriously vanished - Business Insider
One hundred mysterious red objects in the sky have vanished inexplicably over the past 70 years. One possible explanation for their disappearance: alien technology.
The discovery of these disappearing objects came out of a project called "Vanishing and Appearing Sources during a Century of Observations," or VASCO, which analyzes images of the sky from public records as far back as the 1950s. The project aims to locate objects in space that have appeared or disappeared by comparing older photos with recent ones.
Home listening: from Judith Weir to an all-Russian Nutcracker | Music | The Guardian
Many things are taking place:
Fireballs: mail from space | EurekAlert! Science News
IMAGE: Maria Gritsevich hopes that more meteorites will be consciously discovered in the future than now because they are free samples from the space. We should go and to empty the... view more
* * *
There is not enough time for more close study of all fireballs observed in the sky. The observation of a bright phenomenon reveals that a meteoroid has entered the atmosphere from space, but does any part of it end up on Earth? Only those with the survived terminal mass will reach the earth, but unfortunately many of them remain undiscovered.
Happening on Twitter
Unexplained lights could be extraterrestrials' 'interstellar communication lasers,' experts say https://t.co/BjnXk129NO FOXLA (from Los Angeles, CA) Wed Dec 18 23:49:25 +0000 2019
No comments:
Post a Comment