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1. Chicken DNA contains dinosaur genes that remember dinosaurs, leading to the cultivation of 'dinosaur chickens'.

Jack Horner, the director of the Museum of Paleontology in the Rocky Mountains, stated that he and his colleagues are working to awaken the dinosaur characteristics in chickens based on the dinosaur gene memories contained in chicken DNA, cultivating an animal that is half dinosaur and half chicken, termed 'dinosaur chicken'. In the future, they aim to cultivate real prehistoric dinosaurs, bringing this extinct species back to Earth. They achieve this by altering the protein levels of suppressed features in modern chickens during the evolutionary process, thereby restoring dinosaur-like features such as tails, teeth, and forelimbs. Horner explained that birds are descendants of dinosaurs, so technically we can reconstruct dinosaurs from their descendant species. We only use chickens instead of other birds because the chicken genome has been mapped, and we have conducted thorough and in-depth research on chickens.

2. Hubble Space Telescope discovers green luminescent material approximately 650 million light-years from Earth.

On January 10, 2011, detailed photographs and X-ray observational data captured by the Hubble Space Telescope of an object known as the Hanny's Voorwerp (one of the most mysterious objects in the universe) were publicly revealed at the 217th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, finally unveiling the mystery of Hanny's Voorwerp. Original images taken by many ground and space telescopes suggest that Hanny's Voorwerp is a massive cloud of hot gas. Astronomers speculate that the light emitted by Hanny's Voorwerp comes from radiation from a neighboring galaxy named IC2497. Scientists believe that there is a massive black hole in the core of IC2497 that has swallowed various gases and celestial bodies, releasing two jets of opposite hot gas and high-energy radiation. This active galaxy is also known as a quasar. When radiation emitted by a quasar strikes a gas cloud, it excites oxygen atoms, causing the gas cloud to emit a green glow.

3. Archaeopteryx is no longer the 'ancestor of birds': it should belong to early theropods.

The halo of 'the ancestor of birds' that Archaeopteryx wore for 150 years has been removed. The journal Nature published a paper by researcher Xu Xing and others from the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology: through the latest phylogenetic analysis, Archaeopteryx should belong to early theropod dinosaurs rather than birds, and it is no longer considered the earliest bird.

4. 155 'human-animal' embryos cause panic: Will 'half-beasts' be born?

According to a report by the British Daily Mail, over the past three years, British scientists have secretly created 155 hybrid embryos containing both human and animal genes. British scientists state that when the human-animal embryos are mixed, the animal cell nuclei have been removed, and 99% of the genetic material in the new human-animal embryos belongs to humans, with only some animal mitochondria present. However, because of this, some scientists oppose using human-animal embryos for clinical purposes, fearing that the animal genetic information present in the mitochondria could bring diseases to humans.

5. Scientists recreate the scene of the Big Bang.

Scientists at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) have captured the closest images to the Big Bang. They used the Large Hadron Collider to accelerate subatomic particles to the speed of light within a 16-meter-long accelerator, where the particles collide and explode in a vacuum at minus 271 degrees Celsius, showcasing this spectacular phenomenon.

6. The Earth once had two moons that merged into one, becoming the current moon.

American scientists recently proposed a new theory about the moon: the Earth once had two moons, which later collided and merged into one, becoming the moon we have today. Scientists speculate that about 4.5 billion years ago, a giant planet collided with the Earth, and the material scattered in space gradually formed the main body of today’s moon. In addition to this moon, the impact also created another smaller planet with a diameter of about 965 kilometers. This smaller moon orbited the larger moon around the Earth; the larger moon is approximately three times the width of the smaller moon and about 25 times its weight.

7. Two suns rise simultaneously on the horizon.

Astronomers have recently discovered the first planet that orbits two stars, similar to the fictional home planet of Luke Skywalker in the American film Star Wars. These two stars form a binary system: our sun is 1.5 times and 4.5 times their mass, and they orbit each other every 41 days, allowing their brief dimming to be detected by NASA's Kepler Space Telescope. The Kepler Space Telescope also detected an additional dimming phenomenon, caused by a Saturn-sized planet passing in front of a star every 229 days.

8. Research finds superluminal neutrino phenomenon contradicts Einstein's theory of relativity.

European researchers recently discovered the phenomenon of superluminal neutrinos, which contradicts Einstein's theory of relativity. Although the academic community is generally skeptical of this discovery, it is believed that if confirmed, it would shake the foundations of modern physics and change the existing understanding of spacetime.

9. Scientists discover a new spiral arm in the Milky Way 60,000 light-years away, altering the shape of the galaxy.

According to a report by the British Daily Mail, scientists from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics have discovered a new spiral arm in the Milky Way galaxy, but the likelihood of finding alien life in this spiral arm is extremely low. Some scientists believe that searching toward the center of the Milky Way may yield extraterrestrial life. The new spiral arm is located at the end of the Scutum-Centaurus arm, extending nearly 60,000 light-years, approximately 50,000 light-years from the center of the Milky Way. This discovery helps us better understand the shape of the Milky Way, though this perfect symmetrical spiral structure is merely a conceptual model created by scientists. Due to a large amount of interstellar dust blocking human observation, astronomers can only estimate the shape of the Milky Way based on existing observational data; perhaps this is just a small part of the vast galaxy.

10. NASA satellites discover a giant sunspot three times the diameter of Earth.

NASA reported on November 2, 2011, that their satellites detected a giant sunspot measuring nearly 80,000 kilometers in length and almost 40,000 kilometers in width, making it three times larger than the diameter of Earth, one of the largest sunspots in years. This enormous sunspot, numbered AR1339, is not facing Earth but is located in the northeast corner of the sun's surface as seen from Earth. In a few days, it will be easily observable through solar telescopes set up on the ground.