2011年Scientific American's Six

This is Scientific American's sixty Science. I'm Sophie Bushwick. Got a minute. Several for the species can distinguish between two and five bananas, but what's the exceptional the primates they can't grasp the new American rules, what let they range

发表于:2019-03-15 / 阅读(381) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(十二)月

This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science. Im Christie Nicholson. Got a minute? Performance anxiety can be crippling. Entertainers who suffer from it come up with creative defenses. Bono has his purple shades. The indie rock singer Cat Power fac

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(163) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin. This will just take a minute. Remember affirmations? Because I'm good enough, I'm smart enough, and doggonit, people like me. Well, if Stuart Smalley's shot-in-the-arm makes you smile

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(163) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata. Got a minute? The Apollo moon missions ended almost 40 years ago. But for lunar scientists, they're gifts that keep on giving. Researchers studying rocks brought back by ast

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(155) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science, Im Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. We produce tears in response to insults to the eyesthe sting of onion fumes, a tiny insect that flew into your cornea. But we also produce emotional tear

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(150) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin. This will just take a minute. January often gets people thinking about what they've accomplished over the past 12 months. This year, it got the editors of the medical journal the Lanc

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(195) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin. This will just take a minute. Oh what a tangled web we weave. Or so it may seem, because many social networks eventually evolve into one of just two states. We either all get along, o

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(161) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Steve Mirsky. Got a minute? Did you hoist a few on New Year's? Of course, getting together with friends over a few adult beverages has a long history. Here's the University of Cincinnati's Kathleen

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(156) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science. Im Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. Thats a sound that inspires fear around the world: the dentists drill. And fear of that sound itself could play a part in keeping some people from gettin

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(183) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(一)月

This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science. Im Steve Mirsky. Thisll just take a minute. We are definitely in uncharted waters, particularly given that the spent fuel pool appears to either not have water or have very little water. Its completely

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(172) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

Every villain has his Achilles' heel. And microscopic scoundrels are no exception. The challenge for those who wish to ward off microbial bad guys is to identify that weak spot. Now, scientists studying the toxoplasmosis parasite think they've done j

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(187) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science. Im Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. Wine can help keep conversation flowing at a dinner party. And now it looks like that wine may aid in materials science as well. Japanese researchers dis

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(235) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. The numbers of fish and other ocean life have dropped dramatically in the past few decades. That's because of commercial overfishing, and something cal

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(173) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata. Got a minute? During the 2008 presidential election, the Internet became a giant rumor mill. For example, there were the viral e-mails claiming Barack Obama's birth certific

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(235) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. Elephants are smart, social animals. And now we know that they can organize themselves into teams to accomplish tasks. A research team that included re

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(176) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Steve Mirsky. This will just take a minute. The type of accident that is occurring in Japan is known as the station blackout: loss of off-site AC powerpower lines are downand then a subsequent fail

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(161) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific Americans 60-Second Science. Im Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. Imagine life without fire. A lot of huddling for warmth. The consensus was that humans could make and control fire when they first migrated north to cold

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(192) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm John Rennie. Got a minute? Congress has finally acted on global warmingby denying it exists. It's in the grand lawmaking tradition of the Indiana state legislature's 1897 attempt to redefine the va

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(187) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Steve Mirsky. Got a minute? Wanna get out of the hospital alive? Well, the nursing staff has a lot to do with it. Now a study finds that a patients risk of dying goes up along with the number of wo

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(172) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月

This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Cynthia Graber. This will just take a minute. Mark Twain called it the most delicious fruit known to men. He was talking about the cherimoya. If you never heard of it, there's good reason. It has a

发表于:2019-01-08 / 阅读(218) / 评论(0) 分类 Scientific American(三)月
学英语单词
Adinandra
al-fasher
Amboinese
American gray birch
anara
archeomaterials
argument of phasor
Baczyna
baojia
basilar vertebra
beardless iriss
biboveralls
brindled gnu
broadways
car coat
chazs
ciliated cells
debrominative decarboxylation
deep-water wharf
device offline
diphthongization
econet
embarcaderoes
emergency pressurization
entactogenic
European currency unit
exempt from customs examination
exsorption
farbrother
fertilizer spray
fill an order
fintech
fovea supravesicalis
Gaulverjabær
generalized modus ponens
gladiolus hybridus
groundlessly
hapsburgs
hider
high by-pass ratio (hbpr)
high valocity brittleness
hoare powerdomain
interactive content
Leigh light
Levitic
liberty
life boat loan
light-screening agent
lobuli folii
lydimycin
machilus levinei merr.
machined surface
military-industrial complexes
Mudan
mutilating
nonattachable
nonmesenchymal
operating report summsry
optical-links
orzata
outbowed
outqualify
Parishville
Paso Ancho
pectinei
Pedicularis honanensis
phonic drum
pre-trained
precision potentiometer
proembryonaltube
Pucamayo
Quincey
rank-and-file position
regenerative furnaces
retarmacking
reworker
rhombomycin
scare-bug
schizophragma integrifolium fauriei
Scytalidin
self-contained navigational device
sepometers
shock chilling function
Silcaz alloy
solar cooker
spawled
Spiraea ningshiaensis
standards of feasibility
Steam Tugs
stretchable film
suffields
Suum cuique tribuere.
swyle
talosians
tasmaderm
through sb's good offices
throw chunks
top unloading unit
touch cells
triggered time
water pump coupling
yleved