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Copy to Clipboard An artist s illustration of TOI-561 (WM Keck Observatory/Adam Makarenko) One of the oldest stars in the Milky Way galaxy hosts an unusually hot and rocky “Super-Earth” planet. Known as TOI-561b, the planet orbits the star TESS Object of Interest (TOI) 561, named for the ongoing NASA Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite or TESS planet-hunting mission. The planet is unlike any other Super-Earth found to date, according to scientists. It is about 50% larger than Earth but requires less than half a day to orbit its star. According to experts, for every day on Earth, this planet orbits its star twice. ....
Google Maps Routes 37 & 166 (Toms River) Google Maps It took FOREVER for the construction on 166 to be completed, and did it really make anything better? I m not sure. Route 35 & West Sylvania Ave. Google Maps ....
Seagrass in Coastal Areas are Trapping Plastic as Humans Don t Cut Pollution FOLLOW US ON: Underwater seagrass in coastal areas appear to trap bits of plastic in natural bundles of fibre known as Neptune balls, researchers said Thursday. With no help from humans, the swaying plants anchored to shallow seabeds may collect nearly 900 million plastic items in the Mediterranean alone every year, they reported in the journal Scientific Reports. We show that plastic debris in the seafloor can be trapped in seagrass remains, eventually leaving the marine environment through beaching, lead author Anna Sanchez-Vidal, a marine biologist at the University of Barcelona, told AFP. ....
Last Updated: Neptune s bumpy Childhood Could Reveal Details Of Solar System s Missing Planets Scientists believe that early solar system consisted of five giant planets initially and one ice giant with an extremely large transplanetary disk like Neptune. Researchers have been studying the orbital evolution of the blue planet Neptune and the dynamical structure of the Kuiper belt that helped the gigantic planet survive the ‘bumpy childhood’. An unknown fifth planet may have “bumped” Neptune during its migration away from the sun four billion years ago, a new study has found. Neptune is known for surviving the gladiatorial period of planetary clashes. A planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute, David Nesvorny, has been conducting research into the wide radial spacing and orbital eccentricities of giant planets that went missing in the early Solar System. Neptune, meanwhile, evolved through the dynamical instability, emerging victorious ....