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Science News

Location American Science News for 26 May 2015
A retired Chicago physicist has put his 1988 Nobel Prize up for auction.
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Alcohol Consumption Linked to Heart Damage in Elderly Among older adults, greater consumption of alcohol is linked with more damage to the heart, researchers say.
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Blood Pressure Vaccine Moves One Step Closer

Live Science - 26 May 2015 22:23
Blood Pressure Vaccine Moves One Step Closer An experimental vaccine aims at keeping blood pressure low for several months, research say.
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Even 'Mad Men' Can't Bring Cigarettes Back (Op-Ed)

Live Science - 26 May 2015 21:38
Even 'Mad Men' Can't Bring Cigarettes Back (Op-Ed) Back in the day, Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble used to relax with a smoke, but times have changed.
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Billions of Blue Jellyfish Setting Sail for Beaches

Live Science - 26 May 2015 21:21
Billions of Blue Jellyfish Setting Sail for Beaches Billions of by-the-wind sailors, also called Velella velella, could wash ashore in coming months because of favorable water temperatures and onshore winds.
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NASA has announced the instruments for its next mission to Jupiter's icy moon Europa, one of the solar system's best candidates for hosting life
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An experimental Parkinson's treatment abandoned in the 1990s has been revived – and could restore a person's control of their movement within five years
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On-demand X-rays at synchrotron light sources

Phys.org - 26 May 2015 20:45
On-demand X-rays at synchrotron light sources Consumers are now in the era of "on-demand" entertainment, in which they have access to the books, music and movies they want thanks to the internet. Likewise, scientists who use synchrotron light sources are welcoming a...
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Science historian tells a timely story about Einstein and his most dangerous critic Two of the 20th century's greatest minds, one of them physicist Albert Einstein, came to intellectual blows one day in Paris in 1922. Their dispute, before a learned audience, was about the nature of time - mostly in con...
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Modern Human Leg Mummified Using Ancient Egyptian Methods The ancient Egyptians famously mummified the dead to preserve their loved ones in perpetuity, and now, scientists have mummified fresh tissue from a human corpse to gain insight into these ancient preservation techniques...
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Gallery: What Mummifying a Human Body Looks Like

Live Science - 26 May 2015 19:43
Gallery: What Mummifying a Human Body Looks Like In order to learn about ancient Egyptian techniques, a team of scientists mummified the limb of a human body that had been donated to science.
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Looking like a miniature Slinky, a new lens can manipulate and resolve light in ways impossible for traditional lenses. Researchers say this "hyperlens" may help detect early-stage cancer and identify single molecule seq...
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Squeezed quantum cats

Phys.org - 26 May 2015 18:15
Squeezed quantum cats ETH professor Jonathan Home and his colleagues reach deep into their bag of tricks to create so-called 'squeezed Schrödinger cats.' These quantum systems could be extremely useful for future technologies.
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Lassa Fever Death in New Jersey: Risk to Public Called Low A 55-year-old man in New Jersey who recently visited West Africa has died from a virus known as Lassa fever, which can produce symptoms similar to Ebola but is less contagious, health officials said.
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Why 3D Printing a Jet Engine or Car Is Just the Beginning

Singularity Hub - 26 May 2015 17:23
Why 3D Printing a Jet Engine or Car Is Just the Beginning The 3D printing (digital manufacturing) market has had a lot of hype over the past few years. Most recently, it seems this technology arena has entered the "trough of disillusionment,"...
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Multiplexing technique for nanoMRI imaging cuts scan time from two weeks to two days NanoMRI is a scanning technique that produces nondestructive, high-resolution 3-D images of nanoscale objects, and it promises to become a powerful tool for researchers and companies exploring the shape and function of b...
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Good looking: Keep moving if you want to keep seeing

New Scientist - 26 May 2015 16:00
One of the many benefits of exercising is that it helps to protect against various forms of blindness as we get older (full text available to subscribers)
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Protocol corrects virtually all errors in quantum memory, but requires little measure of quantum states Quantum computers are largely theoretical devices that could perform some computations exponentially faster than conventional computers can. Crucial to most designs for quantum computers is quantum error correction, whic...
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Visualizing anisotropic carrier transport in organic semiconductor materials Organic single crystal semiconductors have uniform crystal structures throughout their bulk. This means that any charge-carrying particles within the crystal will encounter different obstacles depending on their directio...
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Ancient buildings are sitting ducks in war. But efforts are growing to preserve them digitally in case disaster strikes, says Emma Cunliffe
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Animal Sex: How Platypuses Do It

Live Science - 26 May 2015 13:55
Animal Sex: How Platypuses Do It With the bill and webbed toes of a duck, tail of a beaver and body of an otter, platypuses are some of the strangest-looking animals on the planet. Their mating behaviors are just as odd, involving venom battles, tail bi...
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More than 2 kilometres underwater, this towering array of natural chimneys, known as black smokers, spews out mineral-rich superheated water, nurturing life
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