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16035 results for: ‘星际元数字人/AI直播一体机✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.jkaAfkqkNO’

  • Tuesday 20th Nov. Sol 104

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on November 20, 2012 We have moved from Rocknest where our analyses of soil, rocks and atmosphere are complete.  We have a lot of data to examine.

  • Plants Wow!

    Learn more about the Plants Wow! programme that we offer to primary school children.

  • Leicester students solve age-old question: How much Christmas spirit is needed to lift Santa’s sleigh?

    Students at the University of Leicester have discovered the answer to an age-old question this Christmas: just how much Christmas spirit is required to lift Santa’s sleigh? Using equations and principles learned on their physics course, five student researchers calculated...

  • New drugs to prevent tuberculosis could be developed thanks to this novel cell wall breakthrough

    Hero tuberculosis Mycobacterium tuberculosisis|Research has identified a novel regulatory mechanism, which when deactivated, results in the death of the life-threatening pathogen.

  • 21st May 2015 Sol 992

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on May 21, 2015 In a  first for the mission we have successfully climbed a slope at Mt. Stimson.

  • Meet SpaceX Demo-2 Astronauts Bob and Doug – National Space Centre Q&A

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 20 January 2021 Join our National Space Centre colleagues for a LIVE Space Astronaut Q&A with SpaceX Demo-2 Astronauts Robert L. Behnken and Douglas G. Hurley, this Friday 22 January 19:00-20:00.

  • Revealing branching time in single-cell omics data

    STREAM logo STREAM logo| New single-cell omics technology allows scientists to analyse cell development in ways that were not previously possible.

  • Dr Celia May's projects

    Browse the PhD projects offered for supervision by Dr Celia May in the Department of Genetics and Genome Biology at the University of Leicester.

  • Tuesday 18th September Sol 42

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on September 18, 2012 We have paused to take a panorama of the landscape: Mt Sharp, crater walls and local terrain before we descend into GlenElg.  This could be one of the most dramatic landscape photographs of the mission.

  • 22nd March 2018 Sol 2000

    MSL

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