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gtpd Physicists Use Lasers to Chill the World s Coldest Molecules
« le: Décembre 22, 2024, 06:41:26 pm »
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 Three Afghans released after months of captivity at a U.S. military base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba said Tuesday they were each chained up during frequent interrogations but generally treated well by their American captors.The men mdash; two of whom appeared to be in their late 70s mdash; are the first former detainees to speak about their arrest and detainment. They spoke to The Associated Press at a military hospital in Kabul where they are convalescing, still under the watch of Afghan security guards.The men were flown to Afghanistan on Sunday, and on Tuesday were handed to Interior Ministry officials. It was not clear when they would be allowed to return home.A Pakistani man, 60-year-old Mohammed Saghir, was also released from Guantanamo and returned to Pakistan. He was being questioned by Pakistani authorities in Islamabad.The group of four were the first prisoners released by th stanley bottles e Americans, who determined that they no longer posed a threat.        The Afghan prisoners, looking frail and tired but in good spirits, said they had had no contact with their families since being taken away by the Americans from various places in Afghanistan. They said they were chained up during frequent interrogations by Americans, but that they were not mistreated and w stanley cup ere allowed to practice their religion while in detention stanley tumblers . They interrogated us for hours at a time. They wanted to know,  Where are you from  Are you a member of the Taliban  Did you support the Taliban  Were your relatives T Vcqt Man behind anti-Muslim film ordered jailed
 Think of bacteria, and you probably think of illness, infection, and other unpleasantries. But thi stanley shop s picture shows that they have a beautiful side after all.     A contender in the Art of Science competition run by Princeton University, this picture depicts how the bacteria Myxococcus xanthus moves over time. To create it, Mingzhai Sun and Joshua Shaevitz recorded the paths that M. xanthus鈥攕ocial bacteria that move in packs to hunt prey鈥攖ook over the course of four hours. Each strand shows the journey of a particular pack of bacteria, and  stanley travel mug the color changes signify elapsed time鈥攂lue represents the start of the journey  and red the end. You can see more competitiors in Princeton   Science as Art 2013 gallery. [Art of Science via New Scientist] Image by Mingzhai Sun and Joshua Shaevitz/department of physics and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics/Princeton University Art of Science Competition                                                   stanley cup       Science