单词:large particles
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From VOA Learning English, this is the Health Lifestyle report. From Asia to Europe to North America, poor air quality is making people sick and, in some cases, killing them at an early age. Air pollution causes six million premature deaths every yea
OK, today we're going to talk about the mole. 今天我们来谈一下摩尔。 Now, I know what you're thinking: I know what a mole is, 我知道你现在在想:我知道摩尔是什么, it's a small furry creature that digs holes in the ground
Every time you inhale, oxygen passes from your windpipe to your lungs and on into your bloodstream. But what if your windpipe was blocked? Getting the gas straight to your blood could save your life. Wait, put down that syringea large air bubble in a
[00:07.21]NASA's Stardust spacecraft has successfully deployed a device that will collect extremely small particles in space. [00:16.95]The particles are called dust. [00:19.72]They form a stream of particles that flows through our solar system. [00:
[00:06.97]An Israeli study has shown that air pollution from cities and industry can reduce rain and snowfall. [00:17.53]It says the problem appears to be linked to the number of pollution particles in clouds. [00:24.82]Daniel Rosenfeld of Hebrew Uni
If you wipe a finger across a household surface that hasnt been cleaned in the last few days, chances are youll come into contact with dust. Look around and youll find the stuff everywhere, from the particles floating in a sunbeam to the fine layer o
Big City Killer If the cigarettes don't get 1 you the traffic pollution will. Up to a fifth of all lung cancer deaths in cities are caused by tiny particles of pollution, most of them from vehicle exh
This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science, I'm Steve Mirsky, got a minute? Every Star Trek fan knows theres matter and antimatter, but why is there apparently so much more matter than antimatter?Scientific American's JR Minkel: Two recent exp
SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - December 10, 2002: Snow By George Grow VOICE ONE: This is Steve Ember. VOICE TWO: And this is Bob Doughty with SCIENCE IN THE NEWS, a VOA Special English program about recent dev
FAITH LAPIDUS: This is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS, in VOA Special English. Im Faith Lapidus. BOB DOUGHTY: And Im Bob Doughty. Today, we will tell you everything you wanted to know about snow. (MUSIC) FAITH LAPIDUS: Winter has returned to northern parts of t
Scientists monitor the injection of proton and ion into the Large Hadron Collider, which is 100 meters underground near Geneva, Switzerland, 23 Oct 2009 A very specialized group of scientists meets this month (July 22 - 28) in Paris for a biennial co
Study: Upper-Atmosphere Particles Slow Pace of Global Warming A recent study finds tiny particles suspended high in Earths atmosphere are having a greater impact on global climate than previously believed. The airborne particles, known as aerosols, a
SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - Winter Cold: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About SnowBy George Grow Broadcast: Tuesday, January 10, 2006 (MUSIC) VOICE ONE: This is Steve Ember. VOICE TWO: And this is Bob D
BEIJING, Jan. 29 (Xinhua) -- Thirty percent of official cars in Beijing should not be used when there is extremely bad pollution, traffic authorities confirmed Tuesday. The order was implemented on Monday evening to help combat the fourth round of he
If you thought Russia's recent efforts to prevent rain in the sky from dampening holiday spirits represented the ultimate in scientific stage management, you ain't seen nothing yet. 如果你认为俄罗斯最近为了阻止雨水毁掉节日氛围的努
As physicists built bigger and more ambitious machines, 随着物理学家建造越来越大、越来越雄心勃勃的机器, they began to find or postulate particles or particle families seemingly without number: 他们开始或推断出似乎永无
Do you appreciate the small things in life? In physics, infinitely small things are problematic. If a structure can be infinitely divided into smaller parts, can there be such a thing as a smallest possible space or does this division go on eternally
Once stimulated, these muscles go to work and cause us to forcefully expel air from the mouth and nose. Or, in other words, we sneeze. Because the nose lining tends to swell when we lie down, making it even more sensitive to sneeze-causing particles,
Certainly there is no shortage of energy in the world above our heads. One thunderstorm, it has been calculated, can contain an amount of energy equivalent to four days' use of electricity for the whole United States. In the right conditions, storm c