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| ©berly816 |
Science & Technology
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| ©David Flannigan |
| Channel Gating:
Microscope images of CuTCNQ with channel open (top left), channel closed (top right), and magnified (bottom). |
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| ©National Geographic/Huang Wanbo |
| The bamboo-covered terrain of Hainan, China, was once home to ancient pandas and giant apes, new fossils found in this limestone cave suggest. |
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| ©AP Photo/Vahid Salemi |
| A shepherd holds Royana, Iran's first surviving cloned sheep, in Isfahan, 234 miles (390 kilometers) south of the capital Tehran, Iran. |
ISFAHAN, Iran - Iranian scientists said Monday that the country's first cloned sheep is thriving 15 months after birth, eating well and frolicking among a flock of normal sheep. The cloned male sheep named Royana was born Sept. 30, 2006 in the historic central city of Isfahan, less than two months after the country's first cloned animal, also a lamb, died within minutes of birth.
Why the rainbow of colors in the Kuiper belt?
For instance, the Kuiper belt past Neptune is currently the suspected home of comets that only take a few decades or at most centuries to complete their solar orbits - so-called "short-period comets." Surprisingly, Kuiper belt objects "show a wide range of colors - neutral or even slightly blue all the way to very red," said University of Hawaii astrophysicist David Jewitt.
The color of an object helps reveal details about its surface composition. It remains a mystery why Kuiper belt objects show a much wider range of color - and thus surface composition - than other planetoids, such as the asteroids.
Some researchers had suggested volcanic activity could have led to all these colors - "absurd in the context of 100-kilometer-sized (60-mile) bodies," Jewitt said, as volcanism needs something bigger.
A staple of mind-bending science fiction, the possibility of multiple universes has long intrigued hard-nosed physicists, mathematicians and cosmologists too.









