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Solar eclipse plunges southern Chile, Argentina into darkness

A solar eclipse that lasted around two minutes plunged southern Chile and Argentina into darkness on Monday.

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FDA clears COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer

After hearing the research materials and answering questions from Pfizer's vaccine experts, the Food and Drug Administration has officially approved the vaccine for the coronavirus.

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SpaceX test flight of ‘Starship’ prototype ends in fiery crash

SpaceX launched its shiny, bullet-shaped, straight-out-of-science fiction Starship several miles into the air from a remote corner of Texas on Wednesday, but the 6 ½-minute test flight ended in an explosive fireball at touchdown.

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The Anthropocene is... heavy: Scientists find human-made objects now outweigh all life on earth

As human consumption and pollution have led to a reduction in the Earth's biodiversity, those same activities have helped to create so many human-made objects that the weight of such materials is expected to exceed that of all people, other living animals, and plants by the end of 2020.

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Eco 'sabotage': Trump EPA issues last-minute rule to make action on climate and pollution harder for Biden

With President Donald Trump's first term soon coming to an end, the Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday finalized a rule that critics are calling a last-minute attempt to "sabotage" future efforts by President-elect Joe Biden's incoming administration to tackle the intertwined climate and pollution crises.

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Fragments of energy – not waves or particles – may be the fundamental building blocks of the universe

Matter is what makes up the universe, but what makes up matter? This question has long been tricky for those who think about it – especially for the physicists. Reflecting recent trends in physics, my colleague Jeffrey Eischen and I have described an updated way to think about matter. We propose that matter is not made of particles or waves, as was long thought, but – more fundamentally – that matter is made of fragments of energy.

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Green hydrogen: A fuel bursting with climate-saving potential

In the battle against climate change, green hydrogen is being hailed as a potential miracle fuel that could help the world's worst-polluting industries slash carbon emissions.

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Oxford and AstraZeneca first to publish final-stage vaccine trial results

Oxford University and AstraZeneca became the first Covid-19 vaccine makers to publish final-stage clinical trial results in a scientific journal Tuesday, clearing a key hurdle in the global race to produce safe and effective drugs for the new coronavirus.

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NASA outlines science goals for future astronauts on Moon

The US space agency NASA published a voluminous report on Monday outlining the scientific priorities for the Artemis III astronauts it intends to send to the Moon in 2024.

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Trump snubbed by Pfizer and Moderna as he prepares to host White House COVID-19 Vaccine Summit

President Donald Trump is holding a vaccine summit at the White House this week, but the two major drug manufacturers behind a vaccine, Pfizer and Moderna, declined to attend.

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Last month the hottest November on record: EU

Last month was the hottest November on record as Europe basked in its highest Autumn temperatures in history, the European Union's satellite monitoring service said Monday.

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Asteroid dust collected by Japan probe arrives on Earth

In a streak of light across the night sky, samples collected from a distant asteroid arrived on Earth on Sunday after being dropped off by Japanese space probe Hayabusa-2.

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