Editorial Delivery in Agu Advances

Vox of the editors It is a blog from the AGU publications department. After a period of 6 years as editor in chief of Agu advancesSusan Tumbore has delivered the reins to Alberto Montanari. Here, Dr. Tumbore reflects on her mandate while Dr. Montanari analyzes her priorities for the Journal in the future. Wrapping: reflections…

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AI predicts the precursor materials necessary for material synthesis

Structural diagram of the Methodology developed by the research team. Credit: Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (Krict) Researchers in Korea have developed a technology that automatically identifies the precursor materials necessary to synthesize specific objective materials. A joint research team led by the Senior researcher Gyoung S. NA of the Institute of Chemical Technology…

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A possible indication of the insufficiency of the simplistic homogeneous models to estimate the magnetic fields of the CME using the emission of turosincrotron by Devojyoti Kansabanik et al. – European astronomer radio community

Coronal mass ejections (CME) are expulsions of plasma and large -scale magnetic field of the solar crown to the Helosphere. The magnetic field dragged into the CME plasma is crucial to understand its propagation, evolution and geo -ffectivity. Among the different observables in the radio wavelengths, the spectral modeling of the IMINCROTRON DIRECTRÓN (GS) emission…

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The Parisian photographer produces phenomenal portrait and perfectly proportionate ‘planetary parade’

A French astrophotographer recently took Tomas de la Luna, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune in one night, and reorganized them to create a striking compound image. Each “planetary parade” was captured with the same increase, which means that they are perfectly scaled. #Parisian #photographer #produces #phenomenal #portrait #perfectly #proportionate #planetary #parade

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