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Science News

Location American Science News for 24 April 2015

Half the US Faces Earthquake Risk

Live Science - 24 Apr 2015 12:59
Half the US Faces Earthquake Risk Earthquakes threaten roughly half the U.S. population, or more than 143 million people, a new study finds. That number rises when Hawaii, Alaska and Puerto Rico are included.
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Air Pollution May Shrink the Brain, Study Suggests

Live Science - 24 Apr 2015 01:26
Air Pollution May Shrink the Brain, Study Suggests People who breathe polluted air every day may have smaller brains, and a higher risk for "silent strokes," researchers say.
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Learning from Earth's Smallest Ecosystems (Kavli Hangout) Peering into the planet's tiniest ecosystems, under rocks and in our guts.
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Melanoma Tumor 'Dissolves' After 1 Dose of New Drug Combo A large melanoma tumor on a woman's chest disappeared so quickly that it left a gaping hole in its place after she received a new treatment containing two melanoma drugs, a new case report finds.
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Researchers at the University of Rochester's Institute of Optics have shown that a laser-generated microplasma in air can be used as a source of broadband terahertz radiation.
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Giant Easter Island 'Hats' Rolled Into Place, Study Says Ancient people on Rapa Nui may have rolled giant headdresses onto the tops of giant statues on the island, new research suggests.
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Generating broadband terahertz radiation from a microplasma in air Researchers at the University of Rochester's Institute of Optics have shown that a laser-generated microplasma in air can be used as a source of broadband terahertz radiation.
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Life was shaped by the very thing that fuelled it, linking questions about everything from our lifespan to the nature of alien life, argues a book by Nick Lane
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Battle Lines Drawn Around the Legality of 'Killer Robots' While the LAWS debate in Geneva was deeper and richer than previous discussions, key definitions - which are needed to word a protocol to restrict them - remain unclear and up for continued debate.
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Find Out Where Your Country Ranks on the Happiness Index (Infographic) A United Nations study shows that the United States ranks 15th in happiness.
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The two robots borrow techniques from both inchworms and geckos to climb up walls while carrying huge loads
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Rare, Tiny 'Pocket Shark' Seen for 2nd Time

Live Science - 24 Apr 2015 17:43
Rare, Tiny 'Pocket Shark' Seen for 2nd Time A juvenile male pocket shark has been identified from the Gulf of Mexico offshore Louisiana. The tiny shark has an orifice above its fin that may secrete either mate-attracting pheromones or a luminous substance.
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In Photos: Rare Pocket Shark Discovered

Live Science - 24 Apr 2015 17:33
In Photos: Rare Pocket Shark Discovered Scientists have identified a pocket shark that was collected from the Gulf of Mexico, only the second specimen in this genus ever reported, they say. Here are images of the teensy shark.
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The Coming Problem of Our iPhones Being More Intelligent Than Us Ray Kurzweil made a startling prediction in 1999 that appears to be coming true: that by 2023 a $1,000 laptop would have the computing power and storage capacity of a...
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Results suggest millions of cases globally could be averted with the vaccine, which may be approved for use by year end
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Some crimes are left unsolved because police can't tell which identical twin DNA evidence has come from. Now there's a quick way to tell them apart
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Adaptive Headlights Could Help Drivers Avoid Hitting Bambi [Video] Robotics researchers are building a headlight that quickly adjusts to changing conditions, allowing drivers to see through rain and snow, follow GPS directions and dodge roadway obstacles --
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Image credit: Tristan Taussac via flickr | ://bit.ly/1HZOFqnRights information: ://bit.ly/1haBUhX It is the stuff of scientists' nightmares and science fiction writers' plot points: a nuclear weapon is slipped into the U...
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Researchers build real-time tunable plasmon laser (Phys.org)--A combined team of researchers from Northwestern and Duke Universities has succeeded in building a plasmon laser that is tunable in real-time. In their paper published in the journal Nature Communications, th...
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The gold standard for analyzing the behavior of fusion plasmas may have just gotten better. Mario Podest , a staff physicist at the U.S. Department of Energy's Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), has updated the ...
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Hubble's Repairman Reflects on the Telescope's Legacy

Scientific American - 24 Apr 2015 15:12
Twenty-five years ago, on April 24, 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope soared into orbit. Since then, its great discoveries have been legion, and the story of how it became the most successful and... --
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Physicists have shown how heat can be exploited for controlling magnetic properties of matter. The finding helps in the development of more efficient mass memories. The result was published yesterday in Physical Review L...
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