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Science News

Location American Science News for 11 October 2013

Why Do Cats Purr?

Live Science - 11 Oct 2013 23:38
Why Do Cats Purr? For cat lovers, there are few sounds as precious as a beloved feline's purr. The purr is often interpreted as a sign of contentment, but the real reasons for this vocalization are a bit more complicated.
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The Surprising Product Used to Attract Jaguars

Live Science - 11 Oct 2013 23:45
The Surprising Product Used to Attract Jaguars Biologists study jaguars by getting them to approach remote camera traps in the jungle. The product used to attract them may surprise you.
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Watch This Drone On A Leash

Popular Science - 11 Oct 2013 23:30
At the Drones and Aerial Robotics conference in New York City this morning, aerial robotics postdoc Sergie Lupashin demonstrated a drone on a leash. The drone, which he calls the Fotokite, acts like a steadicam and does ...
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Salmonella Outbreak: 5 Tips for Cooking Chicken Safely While the current salmonella outbreak may have people concerned about eating chicken, experts point out that raw meat products always carry risk.
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Eye Damage In Diabetes Could Stem From The Cells Used To See Photoreceptors produce harmful compounds that contribute to retinal degeneration.
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Portable jaundice therapy could save infants' lives

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 21:49
Treating jaundiced babies with a rig of blue LEDs embedded in a reflective tent could be a boon for treating the debilitating condition in developing countries     
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Physics Halloween Costumes

Physics Buzz - 11 Oct 2013 21:32
Caufield Novelty's take on an Einstein Costume We've blogged about physics Halloween costumes in the past, but too late to help anyone come up with ideas in time to actually celebrate the greatest holiday of the year. We...
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Quantum computing contender helps refine Google Glass

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 20:37
Google has revealed that its wearable computer will in part be powered by D-Wave technology, although the true quantum nature of the feat remains unclear     
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 18:45
All the latest on newscientist.com: theories of everything – what good are they? the future of 3D printing, life with a purpose, here be dragons and more     
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The OPCW in 2007 The Nobel Committee announced today that this year's Nobel Peace Prize will go to a group few outside the world of international security have heard of: the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical W...
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A Revolution in Astronomy: How We Came to Know the Solar System

Scientific American - 11 Oct 2013 18:00
Editor’s note: The following is the introduction to a special e-publication called Our Solar System (click the link to see a table of contents). Published earlier this year, the collection... --
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Algorithm Tracks Literary Emotion in Shakespeare, the Brothers Grimm Computers are excellent at crunching numbers, looking for words, following a logical set of instructions. But our machines are still highly literal beasts. The subtleties of human emotion largely escape them. Which is wh...
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What is the point of a theory of everything?

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 17:00
History tells us that we will gain from the search for ultimate truth - just not what we expected, says MacGregor Campbell (full text available to subscribers)     
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Chemical weapons watchdog in surprise Nobel win

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 16:43
The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has won this year's Nobel peace prize for its 'extensive efforts to eliminate chemical weapons'     
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Charged particles can be accelerated using light, leading the way for more compact particle accelerators Modern particle accelerators measure up to several kilometres in size and cost billions of euros. But thanks to a new method they could shrink to less than 10 metres and cost 10 times less in future. To this end, physici...
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'Nanoimprinting' technique makes it possible to fabricate visible-light-bending metamaterials at unprecedented scales Artificial materials containing arrays of metal nanostructures can interact with light in useful and interesting ways. One of the most interesting possible uses of such 'metamaterials' is to bend light around objects, re...
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Superfast Spacecraft: Juno

Physics Central - 11 Oct 2013 15:28
The fastest-ever spacecraft recently sling-shotted around Earth on its way to Jupiter
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Feedback: Guns for the blind

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 13:30
Pork pie MRI, cement rain, excessive toothpaste consumption and more (full text available to subscribers)     
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What our 3D-printed future looks like

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 13:21
On-demand organs, Terminator-style arms and aviation nostalgia - the best of 3D printing is on show at London's Science Museum     
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Fighting iguanas are real-life Game of Thrones dragons

New Scientist - 11 Oct 2013 13:00
They don't have wings or breathe fire, but these iguanas in Costa Rica are surely the closest thing we have to dragons     
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Uniformity: The secret of better fusion ignition

EurekAlert! - 11 Oct 2013 06:00
(Springer) One of the ways to achieve thermonuclear fusion is through a controlled reaction between two light variants of hydrogen, called deuterium and tritium. Researchers have made theoretical calculations indicating ...
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