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Location American Science News for 13 February 2015

How 2 Pro-Nazi Nobelists Attacked Einstein's "Jewish Science"

Scientific American - 13 Feb 2015 18:00
How 2 Pro-Nazi Nobelists Attacked Einstein's In a chapter excerpted from his new book science writer Philip Ball describes “Aryan physics” and other ludicrous ideas that accompanied the rise of Adolf Hitler --
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It's Raining Milk! Odd Weather Puzzles Scientists

Live Science - 13 Feb 2015 15:32
It's Raining Milk! Odd Weather Puzzles Scientists Milky white rain poured down on eastern Washington state and northeast Oregon on a wintery morning last week.
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UK commuters spend an average of about 1.5 hours a day at the wheel. Road vehicles in particular are known to emit polluting nanoparticles which contribute to respiratory and heart diseases. Now, researchers at the Unive...
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An estimated 285 million people are visually impaired worldwide. Age-related macular degeneration alone is the leading cause of blindness among older adults in the Western world. But this week at the AAAS Annual Meeting ...
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Sleep Paralysis Linked to Genetics, Anxiety & Stressful Events When you're waking up or falling asleep, do you ever feel like you can't move your body? Maybe you also have hallucinations that there's a malevolent presence pressing down on you. If so, you may suffer from sleep paraly...
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How iron feels the heat

Phys.org - 13 Feb 2015 21:48
How iron feels the heat As you heat up a piece of iron, the arrangement of the iron atoms changes several times before melting. This unusual behavior is one reason why steel, in which iron plays a starring role, is so sturdy and ubiquitous in e...
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Common gum-disease bug may also give cancer a boost

New Scientist - 13 Feb 2015 21:30
A bacterium that lives in our mouths, sometimes causing gum disease, appears to inhibit immune cells that would normally attack colon cancer
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Orion has a giant dust hula hoop around its waist

New Scientist - 13 Feb 2015 21:07
Astronomers have uncovered a giant dust ring after mapping the 3D distribution of dust in the well-studied celestial region of Orion
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Career Spotlight: Research Scientist and Mechanical Engineer Vi Rapp is a research scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory who designs clean, efficient, wood-burning cookstoves for communities around the world.
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Electric Brain Booster (Do Not Try This at Home) (Gallery) Apparently you can put on your thinking cap . . . though don't try this at home.
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Could This 'Thinking Cap' Help You Learn?

Live Science - 13 Feb 2015 20:15
Could This 'Thinking Cap' Help You Learn? How to (safely) give the brain a little electro-boost.
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Rules of attraction: 10 biggest love myths exploded

New Scientist - 13 Feb 2015 20:00
Women want commitment, men want sex, right? It turns out that the stereotypes are baloney and, what's more, our tastes are changing (full text available to subscribers)
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Art, elections and mad cow disease

New Scientist - 13 Feb 2015 19:49
With a British election looming, an exhibition on BSE stands as an awful warning to politicians who put business interests before public trust
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Today on New Scientist

New Scientist - 13 Feb 2015 19:45
All the latest from newscientist.com: Interstellar's true black hole, how much plastic really ends up in the ocean and a telescopic contact lens
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Communication security and metrology could be enhanced through a study of the role of quantum correlations in the distinguishability of physical processes, by researchers at the Universities of Strathclyde and Waterloo.
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Wayward Grand Canyon Wolf Was Killed in Utah, DNA Confirms DNA tests have confirmed that an endangered gray wolf killed in Utah in December was the same lone wolf that had been spotted and photographed near Arizona's Grand Canyon, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced thi...
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Correlations of quantum particles help in distinguishing physical processes Communication security and metrology could be enhanced through a study of the role of quantum correlations in the distinguishability of physical processes, by researchers at the Universities of Strathclyde and Waterloo.
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Valentine's Science: How Mouth Germs Shape Attraction In addition to good looks, charm and intelligence, there's a more surprising reason two people may choose to spend Valentine's Day together: having similar microbes.
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Is AI Dangerous? That Depends…

Scientific American - 13 Feb 2015 18:38
Is AI Dangerous? That Depends… Somewhere in the long list of topics that are relevant to astrobiology is the question of ‘intelligence’. Is human-like, technological intelligence likely to be common across the universe? --
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Air Defenses Against Zeppelins, 1915

Scientific American - 13 Feb 2015 18:31
Air Defenses Against Zeppelins, 1915 Reported in Scientific American, This Week in World War I: February 13, 1915 German Zeppelins (airships with rigid frames) bombed Liège, Belgium, on August 6, 1914, only a few days after the... --
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One State Wants To Let You Carry Your Driver's License On Your Phone There's now a technology to replace almost everything in your wallet. Your cash, credit cards, and loyalty programs are all on their way to becoming obsolete. Money can now be...
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How 2 Pro-Nazi Nobelists Attacked Einstein's In a chapter excerpted from his new book, science writer Philip Ball describes “Aryan physics” and other ludicrous ideas that accompanied the rise of Adolf Hitler --
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