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Updated Thu, February 2, 2012.
501.www.mises.org73400
502.www.hispaseti.org73200
503.www.pd.astro.it73100
504.www.ocde.org73000
505.www.math.uni-frankfurt.de72000
506.www.glocom.ac.jp71900
507.sciencenow.sciencemag.org71500
508.www.fraunhofer.de71400
509.www.bibl.u-szeged.hu70800
510.www.cartesia.org69900
511.www.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp69800
512.www.scienceblogs.com69700
513.www.civilisations.ca69600
514.www.kjemi.uio.no69300
515.www.unfccc.int68500
516.www.e-recht24.de68400
517.www.jgytf.u-szeged.hu68300
518.www.rivm.nl68300
519.www.irit.fr68200
520.www.membrana.ru68100
521.www.ined.fr67800
522.www.biographie.net67600
523.www.dtu.dk67000
524.www.astrobio.net66700
525.www.molecularlab.it66600
526.www.cepis.ops-oms.org66500
527.sandwalk.blogspot.com66500
528.www.nat.vu.nl66400
529.www6.uniovi.es66300
530.www.gi.alaska.edu66300
531.www.inegi.gob.mx66200
532.www.head-fi.org66100
533.www.lelectronique.com66000
534.www.cosmosmagazine.com66000
535.www.springeronline.com65500
536.www.sciencenews.org65300
537.eucd.info65200
538.www.lanl.gov65000
539.thales.cica.es64900
540.www.mai.liu.se64800
541.www.lenntech.com64400
542.www.humboldt.org.co63900
543.www.energy.gov63700
544.publish.aps.org63200
545.www.risoe.dk62300
546.www.mobot.org61500
547.www.newscientistspace.com61400
548.marsrover.nasa.gov61400
549.www.skepdic.com61200
550.www.ogyk.hu61100
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500. www.edscuola.it

Rating: 74100 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.edscuola.it' on the other websites

www.edscuola.it

Educazione&Scuola© by Dario Cillo - La Rivista telematica della Scuola e della Formazione

Description: Educazione&Scuola la prima rivista telematica italiana dedicata al mondo della scuola, della cultura, della formazione, della ricerca e dell'universit. Aggiornata quotidianamente, si occupa in particolar modo dell'evoluzione didattica e normativa del settore

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Scientists to map carbon effect on Barrier Reef
Scientists are hoping a new study will help predict how rising levels of carbon dioxide will affect the Great Barrier Reef off Queensland.
abc.net.au
In praise of … space clippers | Editorial
Robot windjammers laden with instruments could scud out on the gentle breeze from the sun to Europa or Titan and then tack back to EarthThe solar wind is a violent burst of charged particles that creates magnetic storms in the Earth's upper atmosphere. But the sun's light, too, has pressure: Nasa scientists calculated 30 years ago that in the vacuum of space, the impact of sunlight on a gossamer-thin mirror would be enough to get it moving with an acceleration of a millimetre per second per second. This doesn't sound much, but within 24 hours a space sailing ship could be travelling at 100 metres a second, and still be accelerating. It could reach Mars in 400 days. The US Planetary Society has twice tried to launch a prototype space sailing ship; in May this year the Japanese space agency sent its experimental "kite" Ikaros floating towards Venus. And today the European Planetary Science Congress in Rome will hear the case for a fleet of "data-clippers" – robot windjammers laden with instruments, scudding out on the gentle breeze from the sun to Europa or Titan and then tacking back to Earth to download vast quantities of scientific data stored in flash memory. The biggest costs in space are rocket fuel and data transmission across epic distances. A fleet of automaton solar-wind-powered ships would greatly cut the costs and thereby multiply the returns. But beyond this ultimate economy drive, think of the beauty: of a fleet of silent windjammers, riding on radiation alone, literally making light work of charting the planets and their many satellites – all the way to the very last outposts of the empire of the sun.Space technologySpaceguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Psychiatric experts assess parental alienation
By DAVID CRARY 2010-10-02T03:38:23ZNEW YORK (AP) -- The American Psychiatric Association has a hot potato on its hands as it updates its catalog of mental disorders - whether to include parental alienation, a disputed term conveying how a child's relationship with one estranged parent can be poisoned by the other....
hosted.ap.org
Scientist at Work: Waking in the Clouds to a Chorus of Birds
By day, night and everything in between, scientists observe natural life high in the cloud forest of Kolombangara Island, listening to birdsong, collecting specimens, revealing mystery.
feeds.nytimes.com
Vital Signs: Aging: Unsteady on Your Feet? Try Moving to Music
A music and exercise program lowered the risk of falling in elderly participants, a study found.
feeds.nytimes.com