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Science News

Location American Science News for 30 January 2014

What's the Universe Made Of? Math, Says Scientist

Live Science - 30 Jan 2014 15:52
What's the Universe Made Of? Math, Says Scientist Scientists have long used mathematics to describe the physical properties of the universe. But what if the universe itself is math? That's what cosmologist Max Tegmark believes.
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In Photos: NFL Stadiums That Have Hosted the Super Bowl It's Super Bowl time. See the feats of engineering that hold tens of thousands of football fans each year.
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Caught on Camera: Ice-Dwelling Sea Anemone

Live Science - 30 Jan 2014 23:43
Caught on Camera: Ice-Dwelling Sea Anemone The underside of the Ross Ice Shelf held more than just a view of the ice.
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Summer Sea Levels Rising Fast Along Florida's Gulf Coast Summer high tides are getting higher in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, boosting the destructive power of hurricanes.
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Video Game Can Teach Kids Signs of Stroke

Live Science - 30 Jan 2014 23:00
Video Game Can Teach Kids Signs of Stroke A short video game may help children understand how to identify the signs of a stroke, and call 911 if they witness one, a new study suggests.
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This Robotic Reading Suit Is The Best Worst Idea

Popular Science - 30 Jan 2014 22:30
Regular ol' reading is so passé. E-readers? Not good enough. Try harder, science. Here's a good example: suit up and wire yourself into a book with this sensory fiction device. The Girl Who Was Plugged In MIT Media Lab ...
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Yellowstone Geyser Erupts For First Time in Years

Live Science - 30 Jan 2014 22:06
Yellowstone Geyser Erupts For First Time in Years For the first time in more than two years, Yellowstone National Park's impressive Giantess Geyser is erupting. Rangers can't predict when this irregular geyser will blow.
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One-Way Sound - Scientists Make Audio Diode | Video Illustration A tiny fan moves air carrying acoustic pressure waves, guiding them to output ports which do not allow a return path. Think of this as a one-way mirror for sound spies.
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Old Sunspot Pops New Flare-Crackling Tricks + A Lunar Transit | Video The sunspot cluster (now called Region 1967) that exploded with m and x class flares at the beginning of January 2014 has returned with m-class crackle. The Moon orbits between Solar Dynamics Observatory and the Sun as w...
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New Cholesterol Guidelines: How to Make Sense of Them The new guidelines about who should take cholesterol-lowering statin drugs have become a source of controversy. Here's a look at what you need to know about the changes to the guidelines.
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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 are a wi...
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New Anemone Discovered That Lives In Antarctica's Ice | Video Researchers made a startling discovery -- an entirely new species of sea anemone living inside the ice.
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Spy Device? One-Way Sound Machine Created

Live Science - 30 Jan 2014 21:04
Spy Device? One-Way Sound Machine Created A new device uses spinning air to create one-way sound, where people on one end of a device can hear, but they themselves cannot be heard.
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Engineers build first nonreciprocal acoustic circulator: A one-way sound device A team of researchers at The University of Texas at Austin's Cockrell School of Engineering has built the first-ever circulator for sound. The team's experiments successfully prove that the fundamental symmetry with whic...
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First brain map of speech units could aid mind-reading

New Scientist - 30 Jan 2014 21:00
The map is the first to show brain areas devoted to distinct types of phoneme – it could allow what someone is hearing to be read from a brain scan     
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Aliens Didn't Do It! Mysterious Underwater 'Fairy Rings' Explained They're not the work of World War II bombs or aliens or fairies. Instead, mysterious underwater rings spotted off the coast of Denmark are the result of poison, biologists say.
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Astronaut Captures Amazing View of Sarychev Volcanic Eruption Incredible image of a volcanic eruption captured from an astronaut aboard the International Space Station.
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Genetic Pesticides Could Target Individual Species

Popular Science - 30 Jan 2014 20:30
Western corn rootworm beetle USDA When farmers want to kill crop pests or weeds now, they often spray their fields with something that can be deadly to a host of animals or plants. But what if they could target individua...
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Conversation app helps parents boost child's language

New Scientist - 30 Jan 2014 20:27
A smartphone-based system that listens to parents talk to their child can build the child's language skills by offering the parents cues in real time     
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'Darwin Day' Would Celebrate Father of Evolution

Live Science - 30 Jan 2014 20:22
'Darwin Day' Would Celebrate Father of Evolution United States Representative Rush Holt (Dem., NJ) wants to designate Feb. 12 as "Darwin Day," to honor Charles Darwin's contributions to science and humanity.
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Watch the next big neutrino experiment come together

Symmetry Magazine - 30 Jan 2014 20:15
A video from Fermilab highlights some of the many steps needed to build the largest neutrino experiment in the United States. Coordinating the construction of an international particle physics experiment is never an easy...
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To Date, Particle Supercollider Detects No Evidence Of Dark Matter Future experiments will continue to search for missing-matter particles.
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