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Science News

Location American Science News for 9 June 2015
Proton Smashing Resumes at the World's Largest Particle Accelerator Former CERN scientist offers an inside look at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) as it awakens from a two-year slumber --
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Woman's Tattoos Mistaken For Cancer on Imaging Test

Live Science - 9 Jun 2015 01:56
Woman's Tattoos Mistaken For Cancer on Imaging Test For a California woman with cervical cancer, a body scan seemed to show that her cancer had spread. It was only after surgery that they realized the real reason for the findings.
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How Your Birth Month Affects Your Risk of Disease (Infographic) Researchers have found new links between the month of your birth and your risk of getting certain diseases.
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MERS is on the loose in South Korea. The characteristics of the virus suggest it is unlikely to spread around the world like SARS did – but the alternative isn't great either
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A new sensor based on particles whizzing along optical fibres could monitor temperature and radiation in dangerous environments
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Oh, You Deer: Newborn Mini Fawn Is Seriously Cute

Live Science - 9 Jun 2015 19:16
Oh, You Deer: Newborn Mini Fawn Is Seriously Cute What's cuter than a baby deer? A baby deer you can hold in the palm of your hand, of course.
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How much Cersei do you have in you? Standard psychology tests have been overlooking a crucial aspect of our personalities
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What Happens When a Samurai Trains a Sword-Wielding Robot? Here's a story about how humanity is seemingly hellbent on creating sword-wielding robots. Shocking? Yes, but the video evidence chronicles our repeated efforts to do just that. Like a father trying to...
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Everyone's talking about The Martian, a nerdy novel (and soon-to-be film) about a stranded astronaut's self-reliance on Mars. The story is a whirlwind of adventure and its science is spot on. Unlike your typical superher...
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Spinal Injuries Increasing Among Older Adults

Live Science - 9 Jun 2015 17:15
Spinal Injuries Increasing Among Older Adults There has been a significant increase in traumatic spinal cord injuries in older adults in the U.S., according to a new study.
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Improving energy storage with a cue from nature Materials melt faster when the lines of heat spread through the cold material like the branches of a tree--and the melting rate can be steadily increased by allowing the tree architecture to freely evolve over time, rese...
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Surprise discovery of bird-like blood cells in dinosaur bones suggests that fleshy remains might be commonplace even in poorly preserved fossils
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Filming the film: Scientists observe photographic exposure live at the nanoscale Photoinduced chemical reactions are responsible for many fundamental processes and technologies, from energy conversion in nature to micro fabrication by photo-lithography. One process that is known from everyday's life ...
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One potential way to combat ongoing climate change, eliminate air pollution mortality, create jobs and stabilize energy prices involves converting the world's entire energy infrastructure to run on clean, renewable energ...
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Life on the Serengeti: Thousands of Wild Images Captured by Hidden Cameras The 1.2 million photos taken by remote cameras in Serengeti National Park may be cute, but they're also valuable for science. Researchers hope to use the photos to answer questions on how animals interact with their ecos...
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Photos: Wild Animals of the Serengeti

Live Science - 9 Jun 2015 16:13
Photos: Wild Animals of the Serengeti Motion-triggered cameras helped to capture more than 320,000 photos of wild animals living in the Serengeti in Tanzania.
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Serengeti snaps capture secret lives of animals

New Scientist - 9 Jun 2015 15:09
Want to see a cheetah about to pounce? Thousands of candid camera trap photos from the reserve can now be accessed online
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Japan's next big neutrino project

Symmetry Magazine - 9 Jun 2015 15:00
Japan's next big neutrino project The proposed Hyper-K experiment would dwarf its predecessor. In 1998, the Super-K detector in Japan revealed that ubiquitous, almost massless particles called neutrinos have the ability to morph from one type to another....
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Simulations improve understanding of crystalline HMX explosives Computer simulations exploring the effects of shock waves on crystalline HMX, performed by Ryan Austin, a staff scientist in Engineering's Computational Engineering Division, and a team of LLNL researchers, are featured ...
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Marijuana Exposure Among Kids Under 6 Rises Sharply

Live Science - 9 Jun 2015 13:08
Marijuana Exposure Among Kids Under 6 Rises Sharply The rate of marijuana exposure in young children increased significantly from 2003 to 2013.
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Can a Pill Increase a Woman's Libido? 5 Things That Affect Female Sex Drive Ladies with low libido could soon get their own version of the "little blue pill," but this cure for what ails a woman's mojo might not work.
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Researchers find strong constraint on delivery of optical signals to computers Optics, a form of data transmission that utilizes beams of light, has the promise to outperform the beams of electrons that drive your computer or smartphone. Engineers have long sought a way to miniaturize optical techn...
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