Posts Tagged ‘kepler 1658’
[BLOG] Some Friday links
- Bad Astronomer Phil Plait notes how the dinosaurs seem to have been killed off 65 million years ago by a combination of geological and astronomical catastrophes.
- Centauri Dreams examines Kepler 1658b, a hot Jupiter in a close orbit around an old star.
- The Crux reports on the continuing search for Planet Nine in the orbits of distant solar system objects.
- D-Brief notes how researchers have begun to study the archaeological records of otters.
- Cody Delistraty profiles author and journalist John Lanchester.
- Far Outliers reports on the terrible violence between Hindus and Muslims preceding partition in Calcutta.
- L.M. Sacasas at The Frailest Thing suggests the carnival of the online world, full of hidden work, is actually an unsatisfying false carnival.
- Hornet Stories reports that São Paulo LGBTQ cultural centre and homeless shelter Casa 1 is facing closure thanks to cuts by the homophobic new government.
- io9 reports on one fan’s attempt to use machine learning to produce a HD version of Deep Space Nine.
- JSTOR Daily takes a look at the increasing trend, at least in the United States and the United Kingdom, to deport long-term residents lacking sufficiently secure residency rights.
- Lawyers, Guns and Money looks at the literally medieval epidemics raging among the homeless of California.
- Marginal Revolution considers how the Book of Genesis can be read as a story of increasing technology driving improved living standards and economic growth.
- The NYR Daily interviews Lénaïg Bredoux about #MeToo in France.
- The Planetary Society Blog considers the subtle differences in colour between ice giants Uranus and Neptune, one greenish and the other a blue, and the causes of this difference.
- The Speed River Journal’s Van Waffle shares beautiful photos of ice on a stream as he talks about his creative process.
- Starts With A Bang’s Ethan Siegel considers what the universe was like back when the Earth was forming.
- Window on Eurasia reports on a statement made by the government of Belarus that the survival of the Belarusian language is a guarantor of national security.
- Arnold Zwicky was kind enough to share his handout for the semiotics gathering SemFest20.
Written by Randy McDonald
March 15, 2019 at 3:00 pm
Posted in Assorted, Demographics, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Science, Social Sciences
Tagged with animal intelligence, archeology, asteroids, astronomy, belarus, bible, blogs, brazil, calcutta, california, carnival, christianity, citizenship, creativity, deep space 9, Demographics, dinosaurs, disasters, earth, economics, environment, ethnic conflict, exoplanets, feminism, former soviet union, france, gender, glbt issues, health, hinduism, history, ice giants, india, islam, kepler 1658, kepler 1658b, language, latin america, linguistics, links, medicine, migration, national identity, neptune, otters, philosophy, photos, planet nine, popular literature, religion, sexuality, social networking, solar system, south america, south asia, space science, star trek, united kingdom, united states, uranus, volcanoes, west bengal, writing