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Science News

Location American Science News for 13 October 2015
Team extends the lifetime of atoms using a mirror Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have succeeded in an experiment where they get an artificial atom to survive ten times longer than normal by positioning the atom in front of a mirror. The findings were r...
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Happy Ada Lovelace Day! Exhibit Honors 1st Computer Programmer This woman wrote the world's first computer code 100 years before the computer was invented.
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In Photos: Ada Lovelace Exhibit at London's Science Museum Calculating machines and notes that predict the future of computing are among the items on display at the new exhibit.
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Twins! Toronto Zoo Welcomes 2 Baby Pandas

Live Science - 13 Oct 2015 22:09
Twins! Toronto Zoo Welcomes 2 Baby Pandas Two giant panda cubs were born today (Oct. 13) at the Toronto Zoo, becoming the first pandas ever born on Canadian soil.
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Straight up, with a twist: New model derives homochirality from basic life requirements Life is quirky. Although the molecules that make up all living things obey physical and chemical laws, they do so with a puzzling twist. How did the distinctive molecular features of life emerge, and what can they tell u...
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Cold Comfort: Why People in Antarctica Are Such Boozehounds People in Antarctica may drink more because of the cold, cooped-up conditions; a hypermasculine environment; boredom; and isolation.
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Pets and Owners May Share MRSA Bacteria

Live Science - 13 Oct 2015 19:50
Pets and Owners May Share MRSA Bacteria People infected with the superbug methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) may pass the bacteria to their pets, a new study suggests.
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Toward clearer, cheaper imaging of ultrafast phenomena Many mysteries of nature are locked up in the world of the very small and the very fast. Chemical reactions and material phase transitions, for example, happen on the scale of atoms--which are about one tenth of one bill...
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On the precision frontier: A new calculation holds promise for new physics A team of theoretical high-energy physicists in the Fermilab Lattice and MILC Collaborations has published a new high-precision calculation that could significantly advance the indirect search for physics beyond the Stan...
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Move Over, Lithium!

Physics Buzz - 13 Oct 2015 19:26
Over the past twenty years, as more and more technology has become incorporated into our daily lives, we've become increasingly reliant on the little lithium-ion miracles that keep our gadgets running while we're on the ...
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Is Life Swimming the Vast Oceans on Outer Solar System Moons? Here's How We'll Find Out To find life beyond Earth, astrobiologists like to say we need to "follow the water." Even the hardiest terrestrial microbes, like tardigrades, need a little liquid water now and then....
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Why More Scientists are Needed in the Public Square

Live Science - 13 Oct 2015 18:26
Why More Scientists are Needed in the Public Square The public dialogue about science is perhaps the most vital and most fraught national conversation not taking place in our country, and the ramifications are profound.
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Earth's Gravitational Pull Cracks Open the Moon

Live Science - 13 Oct 2015 18:02
Earth's Gravitational Pull Cracks Open the Moon Just as the moon's gravitational pull causes seas and lakes to rise and fall as tides on Earth, the Earth exerts tidal forces on the moon. Scientists have known this for a while, but now they've found that Earth's pull a...
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Noninvasive imaging method looks deeper inside the body to study living brain Researchers at the University of Washington (UW) have used a noninvasive light-based imaging technology to literally see inside the living brain, providing a new tool to study how diseases like dementia, Alzheimer's, and...
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New deposition technique enhances optoelectronic properties of lasers A simple new electron-beam multilayer deposition technique for creating intracavity contacts--an important component of gallium nitride-based (III-nitride) vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs)--not only yield...
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TRIGA Mainz reaches world record of 20,000 pulses in 50 years The research reactor TRIGA at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) has reached a new milestone: after 50 years of consecutive operation, TRIGA Mainz achieved a total number of 20,000 pulses on October 1, 2015 - a wo...
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A new way to infer body temperature from eggshells suggests that small dinosaurs were cooler than large ones, and both were warmer than modern reptiles
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Stories Leap Into 3D with 'Augmented Reality' Coloring Books Regular coloring books are so 2014.
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Listeria Outbreak Mystery: Weird Chemistry Tainted Caramel Apples This sweet fall treat could be a breeding ground for dangerous bacteria.
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LED Pulser developed by Sandia delivers laser-like performance at fraction of the cost When Sandia National Laboratories electronics engineer Chris Carlen got enthusiastic about flashlights containing high-power light-emitting devices (LEDs), he didn't expect his hobby to lead to the creation of a new, hig...
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A particle purely made of nuclear force

Phys.org - 13 Oct 2015 15:27
A particle purely made of nuclear force Scientists at TU Wien (Vienna) have calculated that the meson f0(1710) could be a very special particle - the long-sought-after glueball, a particle composed of pure force.
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Playing quantum billiards with light and matter An international team of physicists has created a quantum billiards game to gain new insights into the fundamental physics of exceptional points.
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