Najmoos Sakib
Bio
Welcome to my writing sanctuary
I'm an article writer who enjoys telling compelling stories, sharing knowledge, and starting significant dialogues. Join me as we dig into the enormous reaches of human experience and the artistry of words.
Stories (50/0)
A Fresh Glimpse Of Uranus Shows It Has A Swirling Polar Vortex
Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory have been researching data gathered by the Very Large Array and have developed the new findings. The scientists discovered that the air moving around the North Pole is likely to be warmer and dryer - a definite indicator of a major storm - by analyzing radio waves released by Uranus.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
A Previously Unknown Type Of Electrical Activity Within Cells May Power Critical Reactions
Until recently, it was believed that inside of cells were mostly electricity-free areas. According to a recent study, many of the chemical processes we depend on may really be the result of electrical activity.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
The Suspected Runaway Supermassive Black Hole May Not Be What It Appears To Be
The supermassive black hole (SMBH) that created stars out of intergalactic space in its wake after being ejected from its galaxy by two much larger black holes is how the astronomers who discovered the strange structure explain it. A separate team has since suggested that perhaps we are instead witnessing a strange galaxy from an unusual vantage point.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
"Alien Message" From Mars Has Been Received By Earth. These Steps Will Attempt To Decode It
In order to simulate the complexity of an alien communication, a group of scientists and artists utilized a spacecraft orbiting Mars to broadcast a complicated message to Earth. Everyone now has to figure out how to decode it.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
Lightning Was Important In Early Life, But Probably Not For Long
One constant throughout Earth's history has been a nitrogen-rich atmosphere. The majority of life on Earth, however, cannot use the N2 molecules in the atmosphere because it needs accessible nitrogen to make proteins. Nitrogen dioxide (N2) is broken down by lightning into oxides of nitrogen, which then react with water to make nitrates and nitrites, which are then used by living things to create more complicated molecules.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Earth
"Celestial Monster" Stars Up To 10,000 Times Our Sun's Mass Dropped Hints For JWST
They really did refer to them as "celestial monsters" according to the crew. These were stars that had a mass between 5,000 and 10,000 times that of the Sun and had a maximum lifespan of two million years. They were five times hotter at their cores than the Sun's.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
The Size Of A Sunspot At The Moment Makes It Visible Without A Telescope
You can see Sunspot AR3310 with solar viewing glasses, the snazzy, disposable sunglasses you foolishly tossed away after the previous eclipse. Sunspots are regions of the Sun that seem darker because their temperature is a little lower.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
We Are Now One Step Closer To Constructing The First Nuclear Clocks
A nuclear clock searches for these transitions in an atomic nucleus, whereas an atomic clock analyzes excited electron transitions inside of an atom to measure time. There are certain benefits to this. Since the nucleus is considerably smaller than an atom, it is less vulnerable to outside factors that could have an impact on the frequency of oscillations. With a precision of 1018, the finest optical atomic clocks have a 1-second error every 30 billion years. The accuracy of a nuclear clock would be at least ten times greater.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
A Nearby Supernova Is Visible This Weekend With Even A Small Telescope
If you don't, but you know someone who does, ask them if you may look around. You don't get to see a massive star erupt before your eyes and glow brightly like a billion Suns very frequently. Even a tiny telescope will detect the new supernova under dark skies today, in contrast to when it originally made news and required a medium-sized home telescope to observe.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans
Early Universe Symmetry Violations May Be The Reason Why Matter Today Outweighs Anti-Matter
If matter and anti-matter were equally distributed across the cosmos, they would be continually annihilating one another in bursts of energy. Not a site where life is expected to evolve, much less travel a great distance to become creatures that can understand the rules of physics. However, according to those rules, as we presently understand them, the universe should have been formed with an equal number of each material.
By Najmoos Sakib11 months ago in Humans