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Our Icy Planetary Relatives: Special Slushies?

Our Icy Planetary Relatives: Special Slushies?

by Guest | Sep 9, 2022 | Course Assignments, Daily Paper Summaries

The author’s of today’s paper found that planets are made of unappetizing slushies!

Earth Week x Astrobites 2022: “Comparative Planetology as a Catalyst for Climate Conversation” Recap

Earth Week x Astrobites 2022: “Comparative Planetology as a Catalyst for Climate Conversation” Recap

by Suchitra Narayanan | Apr 25, 2022 | Climate Change

A recap on our second event of Earth Week x Astrobites 2022: “Comparative Planetology as a Catalyst for Climate Conversation” given by Dr. David Grinspoon. How can Venus, Mars and Titan help us improve our climate models?

Earth Week x Astrobites 2022:  Astronomy and Climate Change, A New Hope?

Earth Week x Astrobites 2022: Astronomy and Climate Change, A New Hope?

by Roel Lefever | Apr 20, 2022 | Climate Change

Astronomy has not been the most environmentally friendly science out there, but have there also been some good things astronomy brought to aid in the climate crisis?

Let’s get building (some terrestrial planets)!

Let’s get building (some terrestrial planets)!

by Alice Curtin | Dec 29, 2021 | Daily Paper Summaries

We know a whole lot about the Earth, except for how it actually formed. Read on the hear the latest research of the mechanisms responsible for forming rocky planets like the Earth!

How the Moon helped mold the Earth into a habitable potato

How the Moon helped mold the Earth into a habitable potato

by Sasha Warren | Dec 16, 2021 | Daily Paper Summaries

How did the Earth keep from freezing over under a faint young Sun 4 billion years ago, and what could it have to do with potatoes and the Moon?!

The 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics

The 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics

by Briley Lewis | Oct 13, 2021 | Classics, Climate Change, Current Events

This year’s physics Nobel made a statement about one of the world’s most pressing issues: climate change. In this Bite, we’ll go into the prize-winning science behind this Nobel from Manabe and Hasselmann.

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