Sentences with phrase «called radio science»

The JPL team is utilizing special instrumentation from the Deep Space Network called Radio Science Receivers.

Not exact matches

In 1945, Arthur C. Clarke, a physicist and budding science - fiction author, wrote a manuscript called The Space Station: Its Radio Applications.
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation has a popular radio program in science called «Ockham's razor».
One of his radio friends «always called science «that mysterious lady» [because] every time he heard something interesting, he always thought, «I didn't know anything about it,»» Grinschpun recalls.
Using the National Science Foundation's Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), an interlinked system of 10 radio telescopes stretching across Hawaii, North America and the Caribbean, the astronomers have directly measured the distance to an object called G007.47 +00.05, a star - forming region located on the opposite side of the galaxy from our solar system.
Rami Tzabar, development editor for BBC Radio Science and World Service, called the story «a forensic analysis of everything that is wrong with current (and past) attitudes to flooding, an innate misguided belief that every major event is a freak of nature and that we can engineer our way out of the problem whilst largely ignoring the cause.»
Michael Kelemen, a recruiter and host of the Recruiting Animal show, a call - in career development and recruiting radio show on BlogTalkRadio, told Science Careers, «These days it's about being first to hear about new jobs and making yourself stand out as a job candidate.
Thus were established, after World War II, the NOAO and the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO)-- also among the first National Science Foundation (NSF) entities to be federally funded — with the aim of giving all U.S. astronomers access to top facilities.6 These observatories quickly adopted a so - called open skies policy (OSP), which guaranteed any researcher, U.S. or international, equal and free access to the federally funded NOAO / NRAO telescopes.
With the ongoing news of rising gas prices in the US — even if they still are half that of Europe — and the shocking stat that the average American works two hours a day just to afford their car, here's a rather hopeful stat on automobile dependency to attempt to balance that out: A new radio interview from Australia's The Science Show reveals that even with growing car ownership in many so - called emerging economies, on a global basis car ownership per capita has peaked.
A few blogs, the odd popular - science book, the ocassional interview with Lindzen or Spencer on some BBC radio 4 science show «Is it fair to call you a denier?
In one of the worst non-profit fundraising environments in decades, how is that the so - called «Friends of Science» (FoS) who only months ago seemed to be begging for donations to keep the doors open are suddenly rolling out a national radio campaign and flashy new website likely worth more than a quarter of a million dollars?
«In the run - up to the last federal election, a Calgary - based group called the Friends of Science Society aired 30 - second radio spots which attacked the Kyoto Accord.
In 1991, the large coal operation called Western Fuels was very candid in its annual report, and it said it was going to attack mainstream science, it hired three so called greenhouse skeptics, scientists who didn't believe that this was happening, and they mounted a number of public relations campaigns, one in particular is quite interesting, this was a program that called for interviews by these three scientists, radio, newspaper, and TV interviews, in a campaign, and the strategy papers for the campaign said it was designed to quote «reposition global warming as theory rather than fact»....
On a radio program, Andrew Weaver, a lead author of the computer model chapters in the IPCC Science Report, called and said it was not included because it was insignificant on a short time scale.
On BBC Radio 4's Any Questions last night, and in his Bad Science column in the Guardian today, Dr Ben Goldacre lays into what he calls the «zombie arguments» of climate sceptics:
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