Results 271 to 280 of about 106,878 (287)
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The Sky Is Not Falling!

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
What are the impacts of the current China-U.S. trade war on the Chinese economy? An analysis shows that while the immediate direct impacts on the Chinese economy are certainly negative, they are small in real terms, affecting less than 0.5 percent of Chinese GDP, and quite manageable.
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The Sky Is Falling

Archives of Surgery, 1994
ONE YEAR AGO you did me the honor of selecting me president of the Western Surgical Association. I had planned an active and productive year both as your president and as your representative to the Advisory Council for Surgery of the American College of Surgeons.
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Giants of the Sky

Scientific American, 2016
The article focuses on research into pelagornithid species of birds and how the species were able to fly while being larger than modern avians. It comments on paleontologist Edouard Lartet's discovery in 1857 of the first pelagornithid, dubbed Pelagornis (P.) micaenus, which had a humerus that measured nearly two feet long. It mentions the discovery of
Daniel T. Ksepka, Michael Habib
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Earthquakes in the Sky

Scientific American, 2019
The article explores earthquake prediction research by Kosuke Heki, which predicts that the early warnings of an earthquake may appear 180 miles above the ground. Additional topics noted include how tens of thousands of people can be killed by a single earthquake, how this new research suggests that clumps of electrons for in the ionosphere before an ...
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Olympians of the Sky

Scientific American, 2011
The article discusses a study published by Charles Bishop of Bangor University in the journal "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA" which found looked at the flight patterns and physiology of bar-headed geese, birds which are able to fly at great heights.
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Polarization of the Sky

2014
Based on full-sky imaging polarimetric measurements, in this chapter we demonstrate that the celestial distribution of the angle of polarization (or E-vector direction) of skylight is a very robust pattern being qualitatively always the same under all possible sky conditions.
András Barta   +4 more
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Sky Is the Limit

Scientific American, 2017
The article reports on the preparation by physicists to turn back on a third gravitational-wave detector, called Virgo, near the Italian city of Pisa in spring 2017. Topics covered include how the detector is designed to determine the source of the gravitational waves, the hope by scientists that the operation of three such detectors could ...
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Evolution in the sky

Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2001
Evolution by natural selection is Nature's optimization technique. Owing to genetic variation in populations, optimization proceeds in a parallel, rather than a serial, fashion. The advantages of this method have long been recognized in computer science and artificial intelligence, where genetic algorithms simulate the evolution of ‘populations’ of ...
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Bright Sky

Mental Health Practice, 2016
Apps are a part of everyday life in the 21st century. Unfortunately, domestic abuse also remains an everday reality for many people.
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The Sky Is Falling

Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 2003
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