The Solar Eclipse That Occurred In Chile On July 2, 2019 Photographed By Dan Marker-Moore. Great Job!

The Solar Eclipse That Occurred In Chile On July 2, 2019 Photographed By Dan Marker-Moore. Great Job!
The Solar Eclipse That Occurred In Chile On July 2, 2019 Photographed By Dan Marker-Moore. Great Job!
The Solar Eclipse That Occurred In Chile On July 2, 2019 Photographed By Dan Marker-Moore. Great Job!

The solar eclipse that occurred in Chile on July 2, 2019 photographed by Dan Marker-Moore. Great job!

Via Colossal

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More Posts from Study-astronomy-biology-ref and Others

It’s A Baby Bat Ray Brunch! Using Plate-like Teeth To Grind And Chew Their Sustainable Seafood, These
It’s A Baby Bat Ray Brunch! Using Plate-like Teeth To Grind And Chew Their Sustainable Seafood, These
It’s A Baby Bat Ray Brunch! Using Plate-like Teeth To Grind And Chew Their Sustainable Seafood, These
It’s A Baby Bat Ray Brunch! Using Plate-like Teeth To Grind And Chew Their Sustainable Seafood, These

It’s a baby bat ray brunch! Using plate-like teeth to grind and chew their sustainable seafood, these youngsters will grow quickly into their role as majestic sea flap flaps.


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Tardigrades: ‘Water Bears’ Stuck On The Moon After Crash 

Tardigrades: ‘Water bears’ stuck on the moon after crash 

The moon might now be home to thousands of planet Earth’s most indestructible animals.

Tardigrades - often called water bears - are creatures under a millimetre long that can survive being heated to 150C and frozen to almost absolute zero.

They were travelling on an Israeli spacecraft that crash-landed on the moon in April.

And the co-founder of the organisation that put them there thinks they’re almost definitely still alive.

The water bears had been dehydrated to place them in suspended animation and then encased in artificial amber.

“We believe the chances of survival for the tardigrades… are extremely high.”


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“NEW GALAXY DISCOVERED ORBITING THE MILKY WAY” You Would Think That Scientists Would Have Already
“NEW GALAXY DISCOVERED ORBITING THE MILKY WAY” You Would Think That Scientists Would Have Already
“NEW GALAXY DISCOVERED ORBITING THE MILKY WAY” You Would Think That Scientists Would Have Already
“NEW GALAXY DISCOVERED ORBITING THE MILKY WAY” You Would Think That Scientists Would Have Already

“NEW GALAXY DISCOVERED ORBITING THE MILKY WAY” You would think that scientists would have already discovered most of the galaxies around the Milky Way, but that does not seem to be the case. Astronomers have recently detected a dwarf galaxy orbiting the Milky Way called the Crater 2 dwarf. This galaxy was discovered through measuring its ‘half-light diameter’. Since galaxies don’t have actual definitive edges, astronomers measure galaxies by looking at the brightest part of the galaxy where half of the total amount of light from the it is emitted - half-light diameter. This galaxy has a half-light diameter of 7000 light years, which would look twice as big as the full moon if we could see it with the naked eye. Gabriel Torrealba and his colleagues at the University of Cambridge, the team that discovered this galaxy, was only able to find it by using a computer that looked for over-densities of stars in data (hinting at the possibilities of galaxies or something else) from images taken by a telescope in Chile. The galaxy has eluded the detection of the scientific community for so long only because its stars are spread out so thinly, giving it a ghost-like appearance. In addition, this dwarf galaxy is near four other new-found objects: the Crater globular star cluster as well as three dwarf galaxies in Leo - a group of objects that is now falling towards the Milky Way. Interestingly, this galaxy is quite new due to it retaining a round shape suggesting that it had never encountered a giant galaxy, otherwise gravity would have bent the dwarf out of shape.

Read more about this fascinating story on: https://www.newscientist.com/article/2084438-never-before-seen-galaxy-spotted-orbiting-the-milky-way/


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Some Galaxies Have Extremely Bright Cores, Suggesting That They Contain A Supermassive Black Hole That

Some galaxies have extremely bright cores, suggesting that they contain a supermassive black hole that is pulling in matter at a prodigious rate. Astronomers call these “active galaxies,” and Hercules A is one of them. In visible light, Hercules A looks like a typical elliptical galaxy. In X-ray light, however, Chandra detects a giant cloud of multimillion-degree gas (purple). This gas has been heated by energy generated by the infall of matter into a black hole at the center of Hercules A that is over 1,000 times as massive as the one in the middle of the Milky Way. Radio data (blue) show jets of particles streaming away from the black hole. The jets span a length of almost one million light years.  

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO, Optical: NASA/STScI, Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLA


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Five women shaking up the science world
From pushing boundaries to defying stereotypes - five women who are breaking barriers in science.

The gender divide in science is cultural rather than anything to do with women’s brains and some countries do much better than others, she says.

In astrophysics southern European countries like France, Spain and Italy do much better than northern European countries like Germany and The Netherlands, for instance.

“In all those countries the proportion of women is going up but the pattern has stayed the same, which is interesting,” she says.

“The progress is slow, things are changing gradually.”

Her advice to women in science? “Don’t be daunted, hang in there, work hard, of course, be courageous.”


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AIR!

AIR!

Earth’s atmosphere recently crossed 400 ppm CO2 for the first time in millions of years and probably will not go back below that amount during any of our lifetimes. (http://tinyurl.com/bus4xpt). But did you know there’s something else changing in the atmosphere to go along with that CO2 rise?

It’s pictured in this graph. This gas is going down, decreasing in the atmosphere as CO2 goes up. That gas? Oxygen. Oxygen in the atmosphere is decreasing.

Be honest…did you just stop and take a deep breath? It really is kinda creepy to realize that the gas everyone is taught as a kid they need to survive is going down in the atmosphere.

Anyway, why is oxygen going down? The same reason that carbon is going up; burning of fossil fuels.

Keep reading


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Hello there

As you can already tell, I haven't been really active (at all) on this account. The reason for this, to be honest, was the fact that Tumblr became stale to me, and besides that, I was very busy with my study for the university entrance exam for a year.

All of this caused this account to be abandoned for 2-3 years, which really not what I wanted at all because I created this account to help people with study and have reliable sources of information.

But I'm back (yay), and I’m trying to get back and resurrect this account again. There will be a few changes (since I changed a lot in the last few years).

1. My love for science is still there and even stronger now because... *drum rolls*... I’m studying science at university now! More specifically, biotechnology major, planning on an immunology minor. So yes, besides primary astronomy contents, I'm planning on posting more biology stuff! 

-> The name of this blog changed: study-astronomy-ref to study-astronomy-biology-ref

2. If you don’t know, this account is member-based. Even though I will be more active in the next few months, I can't be 100% be sure about keeping the account active for too long because of personal jobs and study. I had recruit more members for this account a while ago, but it didn't end well.

-> So if anyone wants to contribute to this blog as a pure studyblr, message, please. There, of course, will be standards and I will select the best people to run this blog smoothly, educationally and actively. For the best to everyone!

3. To me, this account is for people (very communism). So besides the science news, findings and study references, slide in the DM if you want something more interesting on this blog (science art? some Q&A? other cool science stuff?). I would be very happy if this blog could reach more people with similar interest and it could be a fun, wholesome and interesting place for anyone that has a passion for science and study! Wooray!

Maybe that's all I have to say. Stay tuned for more contents!

Head up to the sky, aliens. Keep on curious.


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This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)
This Year In Space (infographic)

This Year in Space (infographic)

From Pluto to the most Earth-like planet ever discovered…this years was a fantastic year in space. Here are the most notable astronomical events from 2015.

May you all journey well into 2016.

See all our infographics at: http://futurism.com/infographics/


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ELISA

Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay is a plate-based assay technique used to detect substances such as proteins, peptides and hormones. 

An antigen is immobilized on a solid surface 

It is complexed with an antibody that is linked to an enzyme.

The conjugated enzyme activity is assessed via incubation with a substrate.

Which produces a product that can be measured. 

ELISA

Direct ELISA

Antigen is coated directly to wells of microtitre plate 

an enzyme-labelled primary antibody that detects the antigen is added.

Advantages  

Fast and minimal steps needed.

Minimum precursor requirement makes it less error prone.

Disadvantages

The immobilization of the antigen is not specific - background interference.

Less flexibility of primary antibody.

No signal amplification –> less sensitivity.

Indirect ELISA

An enzyme labelled secondary antibody interacts with a primary antibody to increase sensitivity. 

Advantages

Offers high sensitivity and flexibility as a secondary antibody can label different primary antibodies

It is cheap (fewer labelled antibodies needed)

Disadvantages

Increased background noise from the secondary antibody.

Extra labour.

Sandwich ELISA

Capture antibody bound to surface.

Antigen-containing sample is applied and captured.

A specific antibody is added, and binds to antigen (sandwiching the antigen between 2 antibodies). 

Enzyme-linked secondary antibodies are used as detection antibodies.

Advantages  

Offers high sensitivity and a highly specific reaction due to 2 antibodies (both have to bind to the antigen).

Disadvantages

For recognition of a specific epitope, only monoclonal antibodies can be applied as matched pairs.

Procuring monoclonal antibodies is difficult and expensive.


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Saturn’s Hexagon

Saturn’s hexagon

This colorful view from NASA’s Cassini mission is the highest-resolution view of the unique six-sided jet stream at Saturn’s north pole known as “the hexagon.” This movie, made from images obtained by Cassini’s imaging cameras, is the first to show the hexagon in color filters, and the first movie to show a complete view from the north pole down to about 70 degrees north latitude.

Via NASA: In Full View: Saturn’s Streaming Hexagon


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study-astronomy-biology-ref - Astronomy, biology, study references and science
Astronomy, biology, study references and science

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