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Location American Science News for 28 July 2015
Enlisting symmetry to protect quantum states from disruptions Symmetry permeates nature, from the radial symmetry of flowers to the left-right symmetry of the human body. As such, it provides a natural way of classifying objects by grouping those that share the same symmetry. This ...
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How Stem Cells May Save Your Life--and Even Extend It

Singularity Hub - 28 Jul 2015 18:16
How Stem Cells May Save Your Life--and Even Extend It You are a collection of over 30 trillion human cells. Every one of these cells, those in your brain, lungs, liver, skin, and everywhere else, derives from a single pluripotent...
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Physicists now better understand wave systems exhibiting unusual disturbances by identifying growing localised patterns as early indicators of such disturbances
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Study demonstrates rapid control of phase-changes in resonantly bonded materials Rewritable CDs, DVDs and Blu-Ray discs owe their existence to phase-change materials, those materials that change their internal order when heated and whose structures can be switched back and forth between their crystal...
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Oldest Panda in Captivity Celebrates 37th Birthday

Live Science - 28 Jul 2015 22:24
Oldest Panda in Captivity Celebrates 37th Birthday A female panda in Hong Kong celebrated her 37th birthday today (July 28), becoming the oldest panda in captivity, and setting two new Guinness World Records in the process.
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Is this the only universe?

Symmetry Magazine - 28 Jul 2015 22:03
Our universe could be just one small piece of a bubbling multiverse. Human history has been a journey toward insignificance. As we’ve gained more knowledge, we’ve had our planet downgraded from the center of the univ...
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Using powerful computer simulations, researchers from Brown University have identified a material with a higher melting point than any known substance.
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Short wavelength plasmons observed in nanotubes The term "plasmons" might sound like something from the soon-to-be-released new Star Wars movie, but the effects of plasmons have been known about for centuries. Plasmons are collective oscillations of conduction electro...
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Million-Dollar Find: Shipwreck's Golden Treasure Includes Very Rare Coin Treasure hunters off the coast of Florida recently pulled up the haul of a lifetime.
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About 60 per cent of the European population succumbed to the Black Death - perhaps because health in general was in poor shape in the 14th century
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Smells Fishy: Putrid 'Corpse Flower' Blooms

Live Science - 28 Jul 2015 19:10
Smells Fishy: Putrid 'Corpse Flower' Blooms "Trudy" the corpse flower burst into bloom at the UC Botanical Garden in Berkeley, California, on Saturday, July 25. These rare plants smell like rotting meat.
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The presidential candidate chides climate-denying rivals as she launches her plan to combat global warming by embracing renewables
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Previous estimates said there were 440 tigers in Bangladesh's famed Sundarbans forest, but more accurate camera traps survey suggests there are only 106
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Nearly four billion years ago, the earliest precursors of life on Earth emerged. First small, simple molecules, or monomers, banded together to form larger, more complex molecules, or polymers. Then those polymers develo...
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One week ago, an international team of scientists announced that they had discovered the pentaquark, an exotic, short-lived chunk of matter that had long eluded researchers. Its serendipitous discovery fills in one of th...
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Identities of Mysterious Jamestown Settlers Revealed

Live Science - 28 Jul 2015 17:30
Identities of Mysterious Jamestown Settlers Revealed Archaeologists have identified four of the men who were buried at the historic American settlement of Jamestown, and all were prominent leaders of the community.
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In Photos: New Jamestown Settlers Identified

Live Science - 28 Jul 2015 17:30
In Photos: New Jamestown Settlers Identified Archaeologists have identified four of the men who were buried at the historic American settlement of Jamestown, and all were prominent leaders of the community.
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Giant Crater on Saturn Moon Tethys Dazzles in Spectacular Photo A new image captured by NASA's Cassini spacecraft highlights an impact basin on the Saturn moon Tethys. Called Odysseus, the 280-mile-wide (450 kilometers) impact basin is nearly half as wide as the satellite itself.
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Polar Bear Awes with Record-Breaking Dive

Live Science - 28 Jul 2015 17:21
Polar Bear Awes with Record-Breaking Dive Polar bears are known to be excellent swimmers, but new research suggests that they are also superb divers.
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Lobster-Eye imager detects soft X-ray emissions Solar winds are known for powering dangerous space weather events near Earth, which, in turn, endangers space assets. So a large interdisciplinary group of researchers, led by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Admi...
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'Expansion entropy': A new litmus test for chaos? Can the flap of a butterfly's wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas? This intriguing hypothetical scenario, commonly called "the butterfly effect," has come to embody the popular conception of a chaotic system, in w...
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Magnetic deposits in char from ancient African villages reveal that Earth's magnetic field had weakened before without flipping
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