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Science News

Location American Science News for 6 October 2015
New Microchip Self-Destructs When Hit With LED Light | Raw + Slow Mo Video A new chip that is covered with form of tempered glass can self-destruct with the click of a button. The high-stress glass shatters when hit with LED light, demolishing the chip beneath it.
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No More Sticky Mess! Scientists Develop Slower-Melting Ice Cream Indulging in an ice cream cone on a hot summer day can be a refreshing but sticky treat. Now, scientists are trying to take some of the mess out of this simple pleasure by developing ice cream that melts slower than conv...
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Neutrino research: Tracking a shapeshifter

Phys.org - 6 Oct 2015 22:50
Neutrino research: Tracking a shapeshifter For over eight decades, the neutrino--one of the most abundant yet elusive particles in the Universe, has been giving physicists the runaround, forever shape-shifting just out of reach.
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'The Martian' Locales on Mars Revealed in NASA Spacecraft Photos NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has photographed a plain called Acidalia Planitia and the southwest corner of the 285-mile-wide Schiaparelli Crater, the landing sites of the Ares 3 and Ares 4 missions, respectively, i...
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Nobel laureate hopes work could pave way to fusion power Canadian Arthur McDonald, who shared the Nobel Physics Prize with Takaaki Kajita of Japan, said Tuesday he hoped their work on neutrinos could pave the way to nuclear fusion power.
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Back to the future: Science fiction turns science fact

e! Science News - 6 Oct 2015 20:56
Flying cars, hoverboards and video chat - a very futuristic vision for the year 2015 was presented in the movie "Back to the Future Part II", released in 1989. Now, shortly before "Back to the Future Day" on October 21st...
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Doomsday Revised: New Prediction Claims World Will End on Oct. 7 Falling into a long tradition of revamping old doomsday predictions, an online religious group claims that the now-deceased preacher, Harold Camping, was right, and his prophecies forecast the end of the world. Tomorrow.
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Protein reactions identified with subatomic resolution

e! Science News - 6 Oct 2015 19:23
Using subatomic resolution, researchers have gained insights into the dynamic modus operandi of two switch proteins which are responsible for the import of compounds into the nucleus and for cell growth. The team headed ...
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This Computer Chip Will Self-Destruct in 5 Seconds

Live Science - 6 Oct 2015 19:17
This Computer Chip Will Self-Destruct in 5 Seconds A new self-destructing computer chip could help keep sensitive data secure, by allowing users a remote way to permanently destroy compromised data.
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Sneezing Monkeys & 'Walking' Fish: Fascinating New Species Discovered Hundreds of new species have been discovered in the Himalayas in recent years, but many face danger as climate change and overdevelopment alter their habitats.
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The ruling against the 15-year-old law, known as Safe Harbour, threatens the business models of more than 3000 companies, including big internet firms
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OxyContin Approved for Kids, Worrying Doctors

Live Science - 6 Oct 2015 18:01
OxyContin Approved for Kids, Worrying Doctors The challenges of treating chronic pain in kids and the use of medication.
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'Oddball' Hippopotamus-Sized Mammal Fossils Found On Aleutian Islands | Video The 23 million year-old animal, part of marine mammal group Desmostylia, had tusks and a long snout. Its anatomy reveals that it "sucked vegetation from shorelines like a vacuum cleaner," according to paleontologist Loui...
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Physics Nobel: Neutrinos Do Have Mass

Scientific American - 6 Oct 2015 17:39
Physics Nobel: Neutrinos Do Have Mass The 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics goes to Takaaki Kajita and Arthur B. McDonald for the discovery of neutrino oscillations, which shows that neutrinos have mass --
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Nobel Prize awarded for discovery of neutrino oscillations

Symmetry Magazine - 6 Oct 2015 17:30
Nobel Prize awarded for discovery of neutrino oscillations Takaaki Kajita and Arthur B. McDonald received the call from Sweden for their work on the Super-Kamiokande and SNO experiments. Courtesy of: Takaaki Kajita and K. MacFarlane The 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded th...
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Girl Develops Acute Hepatitis After Drinking Unusual Green Tea A mysterious green tea drink likely caused a healthy teenage girl in the U.K. to develop an acute case of hepatitis, according to a new report of the girl's case.
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New surfaces delay ice formation

Phys.org - 6 Oct 2015 17:00
New surfaces delay ice formation If you've ever waited on an airport runway for your plane to be de-iced, had to remove all your food so the freezer could defrost, or arrived late to work because you had to scrape the sheet of ice off your car windshiel...
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These Technologies Will Shift the Global Balance of Power in the Next 20 Years Governments, businesses, and economists have all been caught off guard by the geopolitical shifts that happened with the crash of oil prices and the slowdown of China's economy. Most believe...
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Team reports detailed analysis of electrical characteristics of a tiny transistor made from two quantum dots A single-electron transistor (SET) is an electrical device that takes advantage of a strange quantum phenomenon called tunneling to transport single electrons across a thin insulator. The device serves as an on/off switc...
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A disciplinary hearing has begun against a pathologist whose research challenges child-abuse assumptions. She is the second doctor to be accused in five years
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Even if imprisoned inside a crystal, molecules can still move X-ray crystallography reveals the three-dimensional structure of a molecule, thus making it possible to understand how it works and potentially use this knowledge to subsequently modulate its activity, especially for the...
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200-terawatt laser brings new extremes in heat, pressure to X-ray experiments A newly upgraded high-power laser at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory will blaze new trails across many fields of science by recreating the universe's most extreme conditions, such as those...
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