Page 3 - Robert Leajun News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from Robert leajun. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In Robert Leajun Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Underwater Robots could help Investigate Deep-Sea Operations


Underwater Robots could help Investigate Deep-Sea Operations
Researchers are increasingly turning to robots to perform deep-sea operations to learn more about coral reefs and other underwater ecosystems. 
Image Credit: Shutterstock/cdelacy
The world’s coral reefs provide a habitat for a wide range of aquatic species, ensuring that the oceans are beautiful and diverse ecosystems. However, the increasing warming of the oceans due to climate changes and other stressors such as increasing levels of pollution are causing bleaching events at increasingly short intervals, thus rapidly depleting corals.
Projects are currently underway to save coral reefs, but any rescue attempt for these living ecosystems requires knowledge, as do models of how rapidly coral reefs are shrinking. And collecting information about organisms that exist beneath the waves isn’t always easy. This is especially true when human divers and human-manned vehicles struggle to squeeze into the tig ....

United States , Florida Atlantic University , Robert Leajun , Indian Ocean , Bioinspiration Biomimetics , Robert Lea , Artificial Intelligence Laboratory , Office Of Naval Research , National Oceanic , Atmospheric Administration , Technology Demonstration , Mars Ingenuity Helicopter , Coral Reefs As Well , Remote Sensing , Mayotte Island , Diver Operated Video , Robot Connect , Port Canaveral , Naval Research , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , புளோரிடா அட்லாண்டிக் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , இந்தியன் கடல் , ராபர்ட் லியா , செயற்கை உளவுத்துறை ஆய்வகம் , அலுவலகம் ஆஃப் கடற்படை ஆராய்ச்சி , தேசிய கடல் ,

The World's Lakes are Rapidly Losing Oxygen


The World’s Lakes are Rapidly Losing Oxygen
Image Credit: Shutterstock.com / Yevhenii Chulovskyi
A new study examines surveys of lakes conducted over the past eighty years finding freshwater bodies are losing dissolved oxygen more quickly than the oceans.
Earth’s temperate freshwater lakes are losing oxygen much more quickly than its oceans, new research has revealed. The trend is being driven predominantly by climate change and threatens not only our supply of clean drinking water but also the biodiversity of some of the planet’s most beautiful ecosystems.
In fact, though freshwater lakes only account for about 3% of Earth’s surface they are home to a disproportionately large amount of our planet’s animal and plant life. That means that these changes in oxygen levels should be considered concerning on two fronts: as a demonstration of the impact of ongoing climate change and for their impact on global biodiversity. ....

Robert Leajun , Curt Breneman , Stephenf Jane , Kevin Rose , Robert Lea , Yevhenii Chulovskyi , Department Of Biological Sciences , Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute School Of Science , Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute , Rensselaer Polytechnic , Biological Sciences , Freshwater Lake Oxygenation , Lakes Losing Oxygen Rapidly , Driving Lake Surface , More Complex , கர்ட் ப்ரீன்மேன் , கெவின் உயர்ந்தது , ராபர்ட் லியா , துறை ஆஃப் உயிரியல் அறிவியல் , ரென்சீலர் பாலிடெக்நிக் நிறுவனம் , ரென்சீலர் பாலிடெக்நிக் , உயிரியல் அறிவியல் , மேலும் சிக்கலான ,

US Patent Granted to Graphene-Based Environmental Remediation Technology


US Patent Granted to Graphene-Based Environmental Remediation Technology
Image Credit: Shutterstock.com / Rost9
A graphene-based material that could filter heavy metals and other contaminants from water and air has been patented in the US. 
Environmental remediation involves the removal of pollutants or contaminants from areas of the environment such as solid, groundwater, sediment and surface water. There is a wide range of approaches, techniques and methods that can be used to clean up harmful pollutants such as heavy metals like mercury and arsenic.
Among these different approaches to cleaning up ecosystems, graphene is frequently highlighted for its remarkable properties, including its flexibility and strength. It also just so happens that the atom-thick sheets of carbon atoms that make up graphene are useful in environmental clean-up operations; their matrix-like arrangement can act as a filter to remove contaminants from both liquids and gases. ....

Robert Leajun , Robert Lea , University Of Adelaide , South African Based , Graphene Based Solution , Sparc Technologies , ராபர்ட் லியா , ஸ்பார்க் தொழில்நுட்பங்கள் ,