Your Age On Other Worlds
Have you ever wondered what age you would be if you happened to have been born on another planet? You can easily find out by heading to this webpage and entering your birth date. Check it out its pretty interesting.
Have you ever wondered what age you would be if you happened to have been born on another planet? You can easily find out by heading to this webpage and entering your birth date. Check it out its pretty interesting.
Best space photos of 2011: on.natgeo.com/rENnSk
— National Geographic (@NatGeo) December 30, 2011
6 Guys in a Capsule: 520 Days on a Simulated Mars Mission. Are we there yet? bit.ly/pn1WEX
— Wired (@wired) November 15, 2011
Planetary science students at UCLA simulate Jupiter's atmosphere in SPINLab tests (via @volcanojw) fb.me/1mOAJo8n6
— Jason Major (@JPMajor) December 21, 2011
Mercury's magnetic field -- nipped in the bud tw.physorg.com/243840360
— PhysOrg Science News (@physorg_com) December 23, 2011
!Prof Wiegert!: what do you think about this?
Earth Must Have Another Moon, Say Astronomers bit.ly/rMTgTE
— SpaceMeme (@spacememe) December 21, 2011
Lack of correlation is interesting RT @globeandmail How Canada's fastest rising Google searches compare to world's tgam.ca/DMaJ #fb
— Bob Sica (@bobsica) December 27, 2011
#xkcd: Mnemonics. Finally a mnemonic that works for #Taxonomy. #KernelPanics #WhosKatyPerry? post.ly/4P769
— UWO Lidar Group (@purplecrowlidar) December 21, 2011
Michael McIntyre's Fellow talk at #agu11. WOW. @theagu I demand Michael get his own session next year. I'm #Gyroscop... post.ly/4BmmO
— UWO Lidar Group (@purplecrowlidar) December 7, 2011
What a heckuva moving day @uwophysastro. Thanks for everything Phin you are amazing! Let's do it again Monday (the lab) #westernu #fb
— UWO Lidar Group (@purplecrowlidar) December 16, 2011
Today's Winter Solstice is something scientists measure and and predict, so now you can decide whether to "believe in it."
— pourmecoffee (@pourmecoffee) December 22, 2011
Top tweet of the month (true dat):
The best engineering flow chart ever: twitter.com/neiltyson/stat…
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) December 21, 2011
Faster than light Neutrinos, Steve Jobs, and the role of technology in the Arab Spring are among the Scientific American Magazine choices for the top 10 stories in science in 2011.
Check out the full list here:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=top-10-science-stories-2011