Plentiful online scientific databases offer terabytes of data for scientists to mine with their desktop computers, while model genera like Drosophila (fruit flies) are available for experiments in increasingly
powerful laboratory spaces.
Not exact matches
According to Dan Baker, REPT instrument lead at the
Laboratory for Atmospheric and
Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado in Boulder, «a
powerful electron acceleration event was already in progress, and we clearly saw the new belt and new slot between it and the outer belt.»
It resides in membrane
spaces that evade ready experimental detection, but in a new study, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Oak Ridge National
Laboratory (ORNL) have illuminated presenilin using a neutron beam produced by the world's most
powerful research nuclear reactor.
In two related experiments, researchers used
powerful lasers to recreate a tiny
laboratory version of what happens at the beginning of solar flares and stellar explosions, creating something like a gigantic plasma tsunami in
space.