Author Bio: Larissa G. Capella — Science Writer
This is a brief author bio for science writer Larissa G. Capella, not an article about why metal sticks together in space. The content only describes her educational background (B.S. in physics, B.A. in English creative writing) and her reporting focus on environmental, Earth and physical sciences, with publications in Eos, Science News, and Space.com.
Key quotes
She obtained a B.S. in physics and a B.A. in English creative writing in 2024, which enabled her to pursue a career that integrates both disciplines.
She reports mainly on environmental, Earth and physical sciences, but is always willing to write about any science that sparks her curiosity.
Her work has appeared in Eos, Science News, Space.com, among others.
From the article
If you push two metal plates together on Earth, nothing happens. In space, they can fuse into one. Here's why.
Continue reading on livescience.comYou might also wanna read
I hated writing–until I learned there's a science to it(2024)
science.org·1mo ago
Primordial mini-moons may explain meteorite composition
Phys·15h ago
Solar Wind Ion Sputtering from Airless Planetary Bodies: New Insights into the Surface Binding Energies for Elements in Plagioclase Feldspars
doi.org·1y ago
Author Bio: Keith Cowing — Biologist and NASAWatch.com Editor
This is not a substantive article but rather a brief author bio/byline snippet for Keith Cowing, a biologist and former NASA professional wh

The poetry of twilight and the awe-inspiring magic of eclipses: Books in brief
Nature Communications·13d ago
Novelist Cormac McCarthy's tips on how to write a great science paper [pdf]
gwern.net·9mo ago

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.