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Location American Science News for 4 July 2014
The people of the West Indies and the east coast of the United States are dealing with Hurricane Arthur first hand, but the six astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) undoubtedly have the best view of the st...
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Harvesting energy from devices

Phys.org - 4 Jul 2014 11:50
Harvesting energy from devices If there's one thing nearly all modern technology has in common, it's heat. Whether it's your car, computer, television, or even refrigerator, they all generate large amounts of heat. And nearly all of it goes to waste.
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Ecstasy Leads to Rare Aneurysm in College Student

Live Science - 4 Jul 2014 04:24
Ecstasy Leads to Rare Aneurysm in College Student A teen who took ecstasy survived a ruptured aneurysm in an artery near his spinal cord, but experts say his case is a reminder of the drug's dangers.
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Update as of 7:38 a.m. EDT: Hurricane Arthur has started moving offshore and away from North Carolina's Outer Banks early Friday while heavy rains caused flooding in the region, according to media reports.
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Astronomers have discovered a new Earth-like planet orbiting a single star in a binary star system located 3,000 light-years from Earth. The discovery is expected to help astronomers better understand how Earth-like, or ...
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The people of the West Indies and the east coast of the United States are dealing with Hurricane Arthur first hand, but the six astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) undoubtedly have the best view of the st...
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Mind-wandering software knows when you've zoned out

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2014 19:30
A detector is able to figure out when a person's attention shifts from their task and get them to focus on it again
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Oldest case of Down's syndrome from medieval France

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2014 19:00
A 1500-year-old skeleton shows signs of Down's syndrome, and the way the body was buried hints that the condition may not have been stigmatised at the time
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What's next for Higgs boson research?

Symmetry Magazine - 4 Jul 2014 18:32
Two years after the groundbreaking discovery of the Higgs boson, physicists are still hard at work. On July 4, 2012, physicists announced an amazing discovery—they had identified a new particle that looked very much li...
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2014 18:30
All the latest on newscientist.com: how to kill knotweed, sending secrets to your smartphone, Hong Kong subway boss is a computer, idle minds and more
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Idle minds succumb to temptation of electric shocks

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2014 18:23
People would rather give themselves an electric shock than be alone with their thoughts, according to new research, but are the results so shocking?
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The Week In Numbers: Big Tails, Deep Dives, And More

Popular Science - 4 Jul 2014 17:59
Writing Robot Mirko Tobias Schaefer/Gastev on Flickr, CC BY 2.0 176,000: the number of business stories the AP is now able to produce in a year, using its new, no-human-needed, story-writing software. 887: combined horse...
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First data from space megacamera delayed nine months

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2014 17:40
A trio of technical troubles means that much-anticipated scientific results from the Gaia space telescope won't be released until the middle of 2016
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We need to spend an extra $1 trillion a year to avoid global warming – but a lot of the money could come from the subsidies currently handed to fossil fuels
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Lab-Grown Retina from Stem Cells Responds to Light

Singularity Hub - 4 Jul 2014 17:00
Lab-Grown Retina from Stem Cells Responds to Light The retina is a complex and fragile piece of equipment, but without it, the world would be completely dark. With a number of diseases that can erode the delicate tissue and little that conventional medicine can do to fix...
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Tiny waves could build livers on a 'liquid template'

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2014 16:02
Animal tissue and elaborate structures for microelectronics could be engineered by generating tiny swells in a dish of saline solution
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Benxi heavy steel industries Andreas, via Wikimedia Commons Here's a roundup of the week's top drone news, designed to capture the military, commercial, non-profit, and recreational applications of unmanned aircraft. Sen...
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Hurricane Arthur made landfall at the southern end of North Carolina's Outer Banks Thursday night, forcing thousands of vacationers in the state to scrap their Independence Day plans amid evacuation orders.
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The large-scale injection of wastewater from oil and gas production sites into a handful of disposal wells buried deep underground is the likely cause for a dramatic increase in the number of earthquakes in central Oklah...
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CMS closes major chapter of Higgs measurements Since the discovery of a Higgs boson by the CMS and ATLAS Collaborations in 2012, physicists at the LHC have been making intense efforts to measure this new particle's properties. The Standard Model Higgs boson is the pa...
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Feedback: Gone to a better conference

New Scientist - 4 Jul 2014 13:00
Canine light of knowledge extinguished for ever, paper passes over space-time cracks, skeuomorphic symbol and sign and more (full text available to subscribers)
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Remote quantum applications, teleportation enabled by calling long distance between superconducting qubits (Phys.org) --Researchers have developed a way for superconducting quantum chips to talk to each other over large distances through an optical fibre, allowing quantum entanglement or teleportation - both key steps towards...
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