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Xegv DSCC athlete named to Team USA, will compete in Tokyo Paralympic Games
Imaging scientists on NASA s Cassini mission are telling a tale of how the small moons orbiting near the outer rings of Saturn came to be. The moons began as leftover shards from larger bodies that broke apart and filled ou stanley water bottle t their figures with the debris that made the rings. It has long been suspected that Saturn s rings formed in the disintegration of one or several large icy bodies, perhaps pre-existing moons, by giant impacts. The resulting debris quickly spread and settled into the equatorial plane to form a thin disk surrounding the planet. And the small, irregularly shaped ring-region moons were believed to be the leftover pieces from this breakup. Now, several years worth of cosmic images of Saturn s 14 known small moons have been used to derive the sizes and shapes of most of them, and in about half the cases, even masses and densities. This information, published in the Dec. 7 issue of the journal Science, has led to new insights into how some of these moons may have formed. The tip-off was the very low density of the inner moons, about half that of pure water ice, and sizes and shapes that suggested they have grown by the accumulation of ring material. The trouble was, these moons are within and near the rings, where it is not possible for small particles to fuse together gravitationally. So how did they do it They got a jump start. We stanley cup think the only way these moons could have reached the sizes th stanley insulated cup ey are now, in the ring environment as we now know it to be, wa Isva Thin Air - Cassini Finds Ethereal Atmosphere at Rhea
By Mahita GajananUpdated: March 13, 2020 3:03 PM EDT | Originally published: March 13, 2020 12:20 PM EDTThe World Health Organization WHO has launched a first-of-its-kind fundraising drive for companies, philanthropies and individual stanley cup s to contribute to as it continues to fight the growing coronavirus pandemic.The United Nations Foundation and the Swiss Philanthropy Foundation will manage the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund to address the need for money to prepare for and respond to the spread of t stanley cups he coronavirus.WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced the new fund on Friday. The organization anticipates a need of $675 million through April to address the worldwide outbreak, and said funding needs will likely increase as the crisis evolves.We hope it will become the foremost way for businesses, individuals and philanthropies to get involved in this fight against this virus on a global scale, which is exactly what we need at this moment, Kate Dodson, vice president of global health at the UN Foundation, told reporters.Keep up to date with our daily coronavirus newsletter by clicking here.The money will be used to support efforts in tracking and understanding the spread of COVID-19, ensuring that patients can access the care they need and that frontline workers can get s stanley bottles upplies and information, and accelerating the development of vaccines, tests and treatments, according to UN Foundation representatives. And finally you can give.Togethe |
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