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Science News

Location American Science News for 27 October 2015
Speeding Up Physical Therapy With 'Matrix'-Like Brain Training? It Isn't So Far Fetched Learning to walk again after a traumatic accident is no easy task. One of the hardest things for motor-impaired patients is to generate the correct brain signals to help them recover...
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Record-Breaking 408 Earthquakes Hit Bay Area City Over Past 2 Weeks A record-breaking number of small earthquakes has hit San Ramon, California, over the past two weeks.
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See Food Diet? What's on Your Countertops Can Affect Your Weight Food you can't see is food you're less likely to snack on, a new study suggests.
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290-Million-Year-Old Creature Could Sprout New Limbs

Live Science - 27 Oct 2015 21:37
290-Million-Year-Old Creature Could Sprout New Limbs If an ancient amphibian lost a limb or a tail, it could simply sprout a new one, according to researchers who found fossil evidence of limb regeneration dating back 290 million years.
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Slippery Lipids Give Snakeskin its Slither

Physics Buzz - 27 Oct 2015 20:45
Snakes can slither smoothly over almost any surface, from jungle branches to desert sands, without damaging their skin - an ability that has fascinated researchers. The fatty layer covering snakeskin protects the animal'...
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A team of researchers from the Universities of Bristol and Sussex in collaboration with Ultrahaptics have built the world's first sonic tractor beam that can lift and move objects using sound waves.
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One more punch

The Economist - 27 Oct 2015 19:31
IVERMECTIN, a medicine employed for the treatment of nematode-worm infections, has a side-effect. It has been known since the 1980s that the drug kills arthropods (ticks, mites, insects and so on) foolish enough to bite ...
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The Mystery of Why Urinary Tract Infections Peak in Summer Severe urinary tract infections spike in the summertime, especially among younger women, a new study finds.
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DIY Halloween Costumes: 7 Geeky Getups for Any Party

Live Science - 27 Oct 2015 18:47
DIY Halloween Costumes: 7 Geeky Getups for Any Party There's still time to assemble an appropriately geeky getup in time for this weekend's festivities.
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NASA's Cassini spacecraft is set to make its deepest dive yet through the Saturn moon's plume, perhaps close enough to spot the ingredients for life
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Gem-Filled Warrior's Tomb Discovered in Ancient Greek City Archaeologists who thought they were excavating the site of an ancient house in Greece recently uncovered something much more rare.
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To keep people healthy on missions to deep space and other planets, we need to monitor those in extreme, isolated conditions, says ESA medic Beth Healey
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Physicists of the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) in Munich shorten electron pulses down to 30 femtoseconds duration. This enables them to gain detailed insight into atomic motions in molecules.
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Einstein Is Right About General Relativity -- Again

Live Science - 27 Oct 2015 18:11
Einstein Is Right About General Relativity -- Again Using planetary orbits, physicists have pinned down just how precisely right Einstein was: Any deviations from his theory of general relativity are so small they would change calculations by just one part in 10,000 to on...
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Real-Life 'Tractor Beam' Can Levitate Objects Using Sound Waves A sonic tractor beam can push, pull and manipulate objects in thin air using an exquisitely timed sequence of sound waves.
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Real 'Tractor Beam' - Acoustic Holograms Lift and Move Objects | Video High-pitched, intense sound waves, from 64 mini-speakers, manipulate low mass objects in this test device created by a team from the Universities of Bristol and Sussex and the Ultrahaptics Company.
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Sonic tractor beam invented (w/ Video)

Phys.org - 27 Oct 2015 18:00
Sonic tractor beam invented (w/ Video) A team of researchers from the Universities of Bristol and Sussex in collaboration with Ultrahaptics have built the world's first sonic tractor beam that can lift and move objects using sound waves.
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Extreme climate events, such as this year's El Niño, can force penguins to swim much further for their food, endangering their survival
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May the fifth force be with you

Phys.org - 27 Oct 2015 17:45
May the fifth force be with you Discovering possible new forces in nature is no mean task. The discovery of gravity linked to Newton's arguably apocryphal apple experiment has remained anchored in popular culture. In January 1986, Ephraim Fischbach, Ph...
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Leading Causes of Death in the US: What's Changed Since 1969? Five of the six top causes of death in America -- including stroke, cancer and diabetes -- now have lower death rates than they have in past years, according to a new report.
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Physics of 'booming' and 'burping' sand dunes revealed Avalanching sand from dune faces in Death Valley National Park and the Mojave Desert can trigger loud, rumbling "booming" or short bursts of "burping" sounds--behaving as a perfectly tuned musical instrument.
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Scientists experimentally optimize operation of first wall-less Hall thruster prototype Hall thrusters are advanced electric rocket engines primarily used for station-keeping and attitude control of geosynchronous communication satellites and space probes. Recently, the launch of two satellites based on an ...
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