The best gaming monitors to push your PC setup to the next level
Best deals on gaming monitors this week Gaming isn’t just about skills, it’s also about
2023-06-08 17:46
TikTok's latest viral filter says a lot about our obsession with age
Across TikTok, side-by-side faces are portraying the present and the future: how a person looks
2023-07-17 23:20
What not to buy on Prime Day, from third-party scams to Ring cams
With all this talk of deals you should snatch up on Prime Day 2023 —
2023-07-07 17:57
Did Joe Rogan swap loyalties? Podcast titan abandons pal Elon Musk for Mark Zuckerberg's Threads, Internet labels him 'centrist'
Elon Musk's close friend Joe Rogan made a surprising move as he shifted toward Mark Zuckerberg's Threads app in the billionaires' war
2023-07-07 18:22
Valorant Premier Schedule: Launch Stage Maps, Dates, and Matches
The full Valorant Premier schedule for the Launch Stage, including all preset maps, dates, and matches, lasts from Sept. 7-Oct. 22, 2023.
2023-08-29 01:29
Science recreate mysterious ice found on Neptune that only melts at extreme temperatures
Five years ago, scientists managed to recreate what is known as superionic ice, in lab experiments for the first time. Superionic ice is believed to form within Uranus and Neptune as familiar materials are subjected to extreme pressures and heat, with iron atoms forming hot, black, heavy ice. But just last year researchers at several universities in the United States discovered a new phase of superionic ice. The discovery helps broaden our understanding of why Uranus and Neptune have off-kilter magnetic fields with multiple poles. Different to forms of water on Earth, the oxygen atoms in superionic ice are locked in a solid cubic lattice, while the ionised hydrogen atoms are loose, flowing through the lattice. This gives superionic ice conductive properties as well as raising its melting point, meaning the frozen water remains solid at temperatures up to 4704 Degree Celsius (8500 Fahrenheit). In this latest study, Stanford University's Arianna Gleason and colleagues blasted thin slivers of water, sandwiched between two diamond layers, with some extremely powerful lasers. "Recent discoveries of water-rich Neptune-like exoplanets require a more detailed understanding of the phase diagram of [water] at pressure–temperature conditions relevant to their planetary interiors," Gleason and colleagues explain in their paper, from January 2022 X-Ray diffraction revealed the hot, dense ice's crystal structure, and confirmed the ice crystals were in fact a new phase, distinct from the superionic ice that was observed in 2019. This newly discovered superionic ice, Ice XIX, has increased conductivity compared to its 2019 predecessor. The conductivity is important because it helps us understand why certain off-kilter magnetic fields are generated on planets such as Neptune and Uranus. You can read the paper, published in Scientific Reports here. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-10-19 16:53
How to livestream the NBA playoffs for free
Stream content in other locations with a VPN. Shop these deals: Best for speed ExpressVPN
2023-05-10 21:52
How China Left the World Far Behind in the Battery Race
This is one of the stories in Akshat Rathi’s new book Climate Capitalism, which is out today. Akshat
2023-10-12 20:55
Save over $400 on this like-new Microsoft Surface Laptop
TL;DR: As of Aug. 31, you can get a refurbished Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 for
2023-08-31 17:55
Lexmark MB3442i Review
Whatever's on your features checklist for your next mono laser all in one printer meant
2023-06-16 06:29
Score a refurbished MacBook Pro for under $270
TL;DR: As of May 11, you can snag a refurbished MacBook Pro (Core i5, 8GB
2023-05-11 18:22
Google Street View catches couple 'having sex' on roadside
A suspicious couple appear to have been caught in the act - on Google Street View. The man and woman were standing on a vacant plot of land full of rubbish. The duo apparently travelled to the secluded area on a motorbike to enjoy a frisky encounter away from prying eyes. The woman appears to be half-naked while the man seems to be zipping himself up. They both seem to notice the Google Street View car. The couple was caught in the act in the neighbourhood of Paseo de Santa Fe, Juárez, Mexico. Google uses vehicles equipped with high-resolution cameras to capture every corner of the planet for their Street View service. However, the cameras occasionally capture people in compromising situations. In Mexico, residents have been filmed brawling, face planting the ground, and taking part in sex acts by the roadside, along with other unflattering incidents. Those captured in awkward situations by the cameras can ask Google for the images to be removed. Offended citizens can fill out a form in the Google support section and mention that the images were published without their consent.
2023-05-26 19:20
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