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Science News

Location American Science News for 8 November 2013

Ultra-high-energy neutrinos

Symmetry Magazine - 8 Nov 2013 22:59
Scientists on the IceCube experiment discovered two extraterrestrial neutrinos with energies higher than any neutrino anyone had detected before. Physicists on the IceCube experiment were in for a jolt. In processing dat...
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Why Is Mars A Desert Wasteland? NASA MAVEN Mission Will Investigate | Video Set to launch on Nov 18th, 2013, the orbiter seek to rewind the planet's geologic history back to the wet, warm epoch that might have spawned life. MAVEN's instruments may help scientists understand why the planet lost m...
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Catholic Education No Better Than Public Schooling, Study Suggests Catholic schools don't provide a better education than public schools, at least in the basics such as math and reading. Instead, Catholic students' edge may come from their different socioeconomic background.
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New Coiled Fibers Could Heal Damaged Hearts

Live Science - 8 Nov 2013 21:50
New Coiled Fibers Could Heal Damaged Hearts Heart tissue implants -- that could help people's hearts spring back into action after heart attacks -- could be made better by growing heart cells in scaffolds made of coiled fibers, rather than straight fibers, researc...
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Best Age for Woman's First Child? 25, Poll Finds

Live Science - 8 Nov 2013 21:37
Best Age for Woman's First Child? 25, Poll Finds The ideal age for first parenthood is 25 for women and 27 for men, new research suggests. But those averages conceal wide differences in opinion across race, gender and education level.
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3 Tips for Getting into an Exercise Groove

Live Science - 8 Nov 2013 21:31
3 Tips for Getting into an Exercise Groove Whether everyday activities such as housework, gardening or sex can be considered as exercise is a topic of current research. But traditional workouts are still important. Here are tips for starting and sticking with an ...
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Power Up Duke University A wireless device developed by researchers at Duke University that converts microwaves into electricity could eventually harvest Wi-Fi or satellite signals for power, according to its creators. I...
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Nano Panels Beam Heat Into Space | Video

Live Science - 8 Nov 2013 21:12
Nano Panels Beam Heat Into Space | Video Solar radiation, trapped by our atmosphere, keeps Earth warm. But if human activity is making it too warm, Stanford scientists have developed a panel that can return heat to space. Is this a tool for future geo-engineeri...
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Creepy Soft Robots Could Get Under Your Skin

Physics Buzz - 8 Nov 2013 21:00
Robots tiny enough to fit inside your body might someday deliver your medicine from the inside. From Inside Science TV.
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New Hammerhead Shark Species Found Off South Carolina One might think that all the species of shark off the U.S. East Coast would've been identified by now. But a new analysis has turned up a new species of hammerhead shark off South Carolina.
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 8 Nov 2013 19:45
All the latest on newscientist.com: the modern diseases our ancestors endured, spider-drones weave high-rise buildings, six-tailed comet and more     
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Next-generation semiconductors synthesis

Phys.org - 8 Nov 2013 19:40
Although silicon semiconductors are nearly universal in modern electronics, devices made from silicon have limitations--including that they cease to function properly at very high temperatures. One promising alternative ...
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Some Americans Log More than 24 Hours Daily on Devices The amount of media requested by users in the United States will reach about 15.5 hours per person by 2015. But people aren't paying attention to all that data, researchers say.
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Kinect security cameras know when you swing a punch

New Scientist - 8 Nov 2013 19:00
A motion-sensing camera that recognises kicking, pushing, throwing and hitting could raise the alarm when violence breaks out     
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What Is Saxophone Lung?

Live Science - 8 Nov 2013 18:58
What Is Saxophone Lung? A man in Atlanta has been diagnosed with a severe case of saxophone lung. Though the name of the condition seems odd, it's quite appropriate, since saxophonists and other wind-instrument players are among those who contr...
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Optical Technique Sorts Grapes for Wine Quality

Live Science - 8 Nov 2013 18:51
Optical Technique Sorts Grapes for Wine Quality New system can automatically identify grape varietal and sugar content.
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Astrophile: Dying asteroid is a six-tailed beast

New Scientist - 8 Nov 2013 18:36
An asteroid with a record number of dusty tails may be rotating so fast it is falling apart, which could help us understand the way asteroids die     
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Mobile Med-Tech Revolution Hits Hospitals

Singularity Hub - 8 Nov 2013 18:24
Mobile Med-Tech Revolution Hits Hospitals Go to a hospital intensive care unit and what you'll see are bulky machines not very different from what you saw on ER in the 1990s. But mobile vital sign monitors are at last making inroads inside the hospital walls. So...
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Ripped Apart | Space Wallpaper

Live Science - 8 Nov 2013 18:11
Ripped Apart | Space Wallpaper This fascinating space wallpaper shows a simulation of a gas cloud passing close to the supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy in mid-2013.
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Ancient afflictions: Mummies got heart disease too

New Scientist - 8 Nov 2013 18:00
Cancer, depression, ADHD, autism - we blame them on the stresses and strains of modern life, but these diseases could have much older origins (full text available to subscribers)     
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Boy's Bone Marrow Transplant May Have Cured His Peanut Allergy A 10-year-old boy with leukemia underwent a bone-marrow transplant, and after the procedure, doctors discovered that he was cured of his peanut allergy, they reported today.
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Blinky the crab has three eyes

New Scientist - 8 Nov 2013 17:22
This tiny freshwater crab has three eyes and an antenna-like structure on its back - and science has never seen anything like it     
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