ஆர்ல்யாஂடொ ஃப்ளோரின் ரோசு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

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

Top News In ஆர்ல்யாஂடொ ஃப்ளோரின் ரோசு Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Tyrannosaurus Rex Likely Hunted in Packs - and There Were Billions of Them!


Paleontologist Alan Titus, who discovered the Rainbows and Unicorns site in 2014 and is one of the lead authors of the
PeerJ study, says that the group of deceased and fossilized Tyrannosaurus rex specimens were the victims of a massive flood that drowned them and washed their bodies into a lake. They lay on the bottom, grouped together and undisturbed, for millions of years, until climatological and geological changes dried the lake and created a river (also now gone) that eroded the soil and brought the bones back up to the earth’s surface.
“We used a truly multi-disciplinary approach (physical and chemical evidence) to piece the history of the site together,” explained Celina Suarez , a University of Arkansas geologist and study participant. “The end-result [was] that the tyrannosaurs died together during a seasonal flooding event.” ....

United States , Red Deer , Joe Sertich , Orlando Florin Rosu , Hans Larsson , Alan Titus , Celina Suarez , University Of California , Us Bureau Of Land Management , Mcgill University , Escalante National Monument , Denver Museum Of Nature , University Of Arkansas , North America , Complex Truth Finally Emerges , Land Management , Grand Staircase Escalante National , Unicorns Quarry , Denver Museum , Adobe Stock , Steady Wins , North American , Countless Packs , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , சிவப்பு மான் , ஓஹோ சேர்த்திச் ,

Physics - An Octad for Darmstadtium and Excitement for Copernicium


An Octad for Darmstadtium and Excitement for Copernicium
January 22, 2021•
Physics 14, s6
The discovery that copernicium can decay into a new isotope of darmstadtium and the observation of a previously unseen excited state of copernicium provide clues to the location of the “island of stability.”
Orlando Florin Rosu/stock.adobe.com
×
A holy grail of nuclear physics is to understand the stability of the periodic table’s heaviest elements. The problem is, these elements only exist in the lab and are hard to make. In an experiment at the GSI Helmholtz Center for Heavy Ion Research in Germany, researchers have now observed a previously unseen isotope of the heavy element darmstadtium and measured the decay of an excited state of an isotope of another heavy element, copernicium [1]. The results could provide “anchor points” for theories that predict the stability of these heavy elements, says Anton Såmark-Roth, of Lund University in Sweden, ....

Katherine Wright , Orlando Florin Rosu , Lund University , Lion Research , Helmholtz Center , Orlando Florin , Heavy Ion Research , Senior Editor , க்யாதரிந் ரைட் , ஆர்ல்யாஂடொ ஃப்ளோரின் ரோசு , லண்ட் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , அயன் ஆராய்ச்சி , ஆர்ல்யாஂடொ ஃப்ளோரின் , கனமான அயன் ஆராய்ச்சி , மூத்தவர் ஆசிரியர் ,