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Science News

Location American Science News for 29 January 2014

Psychobiotics: How gut bacteria mess with your mind

New Scientist - 29 Jan 2014 18:00
Gut bugs can change the way our brains work, offering new ways to relieve problems like stress, anxiety and depression, say John Cryan and Timothy Dinan     
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What Causes Skin Tags?

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 23:58
What Causes Skin Tags? The common skin growth called a skin tag, or acrochordon, usually develops in folds of skin and causes little to no harm. Still, these growths can be irritating, and doctors can easily remove them.
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Nearly everyone uses piezoelectrics: Be nice to know how they work (Phys.org) --Piezoelectrics--materials that can change mechanical stress to electricity and back again--are everywhere in modern life. Computer hard drives. Loud speakers. Medical ultrasound. Sonar. Though piezoelectrics...
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Florida's Rat-Saving Labors Aren't Paying Off

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 22:51
Florida's Rat-Saving Labors Aren't Paying Off Apparently rats raised at Disney aren't prepared for the real world. A new study warns that Florida's efforts to breed endangered Key Largo woodrats in captivity are doomed.
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Did newborn sun have weirdly weak solar wind?

New Scientist - 29 Jan 2014 22:30
The first sighting of wind from a young solar twin suggests that our sun was a weakling in its youth, which might have allowed Mars to play host to water     
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Podcast: Astronaut Chris Hadfield

Physics Buzz - 29 Jan 2014 22:28
This week we have a very special guest on the podcast: astronaut Chris Hadfield. Hadfield is the first Canadian astronaut to space walk, and the first Canadian astronaut to command a spaceship (the ISS). He has flown on ...
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Rather than protecting you from degenerative disease, popping an antioxidant-packed vitamin seems to increase cancer risk – we now have an idea why     
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Photo Gallery: Snow Paralyzes the South

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 22:15
Photo Gallery: Snow Paralyzes the South A winter storm caused gridlock as far south as Alabama, when snow turned to ice on streets and people abandoned their vehicles.
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'Diaper Rash' Fungus Resistant To Cream In Space | Video Candida yeast, producer of diaper rash and thrush, was experimented on in the microgravity environment aboard the International Space Station in 2012. Principal investigator Sheila Nielson-Preiss talks about the findings...
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California Communities Could Soon Run out of Water

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 21:48
California Communities Could Soon Run out of Water Small rural communities across the state could see their water run out in as little as two months, a new report from the California Department of Public Health suggests.
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Colorado's Highest Peaks Re-Named After Super Bowl Team For a limited time, Pikes Peak is Joel Dressen Peak and Colorado's highest mountain will bear Peyton Manning's name as the governor of Colorado finds an appropriately outdoorsy way to honor the Super Bowl-bound Broncos f...
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What Is Norovirus?

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 21:35
What Is Norovirus? Once again, a cruise ship is limping into port carrying hundreds of passengers and crew sickened by norovirus. But what exactly is norovirus, and why does it spread so easily on cruise ships?
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Grey is the New Black Hole: Is Stephen Hawking Right? (Op-Ed) Over the past few days, the media has cried out the recent proclamation from Stephen Hawking that black holes, a mystery of both science and science fiction, do not exist.
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Alaska Heat & Atlanta Snow: What Happened?

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 21:24
Alaska Heat & Atlanta Snow: What Happened? A killer winter storm paralyzed the South yesterday, but it was sunny and warm in Alaska, with record high temperatures. What's up with this weather?
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Real glass that bends but doesn't break

e! Science News - 29 Jan 2014 21:16
Normally when you drop a drinking glass on the floor it shatters. But, in future, thanks to a technique developed in McGill's Department of Mechanical Engineering, when the same thing happens the glass is likely to simpl...
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Simulating Mars Terraforming, on Earth (Video)

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 21:16
Simulating Mars Terraforming, on Earth (Video) If astronauts are to terraform Mars, agriculture may rely on Earth microbes improving Martian soil.
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First-Ever Weather Map of Failed Star Reveals Patchy Alien Clouds For the first time, scientists have created a map of the surface of a failed star. The map shows the weather on the surface of WISE J104915.57-531906.1B (called Luhman 16B for short), the nearest brown dwarf to Earth.
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Beams of sound immerse you in music others can't hear

New Scientist - 29 Jan 2014 21:00
From restaurant music that only certain tables can hear to flying emails, the ability to place sound exactly where you want it has all kinds of unusual uses     
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A New Method for Making Stem Cells | Video

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 20:41
A New Method for Making Stem Cells | Video Using the new method, lymphocytes were converted into stem cells (marked in green), which were used to create a mouse embryo with a beating heart.
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At least 20% of Neanderthal DNA Is in Humans

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 20:30
At least 20% of Neanderthal DNA Is in Humans Some 300 sexual hookups between Neanderthals and modern humans could explain the lurking caveman DNA, say the scientists who found those genes have influenced humans' skin and hair.
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Testosterone Again Linked to Heart Risks

Live Science - 29 Jan 2014 20:18
Testosterone Again Linked to Heart Risks For some men, taking testosterone may triple the risk of having a heart attack, according to a new study.
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Bizarre Magnetic Particle Revealed in Ultra-Cold Lab Experiment A behavior predicted by the famous physicist Paul Dirac in 1931 has been shown in a system of ultracooled atoms in the lab. The system mimics a magnetic monopole, which has only one pole, passing through an electron.
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