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Science News

Location American Science News for 4 July 2013

Workouts are no antidote to death by desk job

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 19:00
Long periods of desk work or TV viewing can slash your life expectancy, even if you work out every day. So what can you do about doing nothing? (full text available to subscribers)
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At the beginning of July 2013, the Helmholtz Virtual Institute (VI) in which JAI is one of the partners, officially started. This VI is aimed at research on plasma wakefield acceleration of highly relativistic electrons....
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Mystery radio bursts blamed on black hole 'blitzars'

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 22:00
Fast radio bursts have baffled astronomers since their discovery six years ago, but now more examples have been found, and they are giving up their secrets
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Precision herbicide drones launch strikes on weeds

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 21:30
A drone zipping over fields can spot the colour variations that give away weeds amongst crops, before sending in a ground vehicle to spray the densest patches
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 21:00
All the latest on newscientist.com: death by desk job, CGI modelling is skin deep, clingy planet, a badly dubbed life, happy birthday Higgs! and more
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3D-printed dummy landmines teach subtle skills

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 20:23
Abandoned landmines injure or kill hundreds of people around the world every year. Electronic training mines could make mine clearance safer
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Giant superconducting ring takes a road trip

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 20:06
A 15-metre-wide ring of magnets to be used in experiments on subatomic particles is travelling by road, river and sea to its new home at Fermilab in Illinois
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Geneva, 4 July 2013. From 27 to 30 September 2013, CERN[1] is putting on a long weekend of events and activities as a way of sharing its research and discoveries with its community and the wider public.
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A smartphone app catalogues photos according to the angle from which they were taken, letting the user swipe to circle a scene la The Matrix
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PH is the first case of a person who hears speech before seeing a speaker's lips move. His badly dubbed world reveals timing mechanisms in the brain
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No more excuses over switch to clean energy

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 11:00
Despite government indifference, renewables are taking over the world. Imagine what could happen with some serious backing
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A year on from the discovery of the particle that endows others with mass, physicists are still joyfully wrestling with some of its more intriguing mysteries
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Astrophile: Clingy planet makes stellar parent flip

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2013 03:01
In a superfast solar cycle, the star Tau Boo swaps its magnetic poles at least every two years, and a big, gassy offspring may be to blame
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