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Science News

Location American Science News for 7 October 2016
Researchers prevent quantum errors from occurring by continuously watching a quantum system A team of scientists led by Tim Taminiau of QuTech, the quantum institute of TU Delft and TNO, has now experimentally demonstrated that errors in quantum computations can be suppressed by repeated observations of quantum...
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Team simulates a magnetar to seek dark matter particle MIT physicists are proposing a new experiment to detect a dark matter particle called the axion. If successful, the effort could crack one of the most perplexing unsolved mysteries in particle physics, as well as finally...
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Do Einstein's Theories Provide Sources of Energy for Superheros How do superheroes fly? The answer may be dark energy.   --
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Food-poisoning bacteria may be behind Crohn's disease People who retain a particular bacterium in their gut after a bout of food poisoning may be at an increased risk of developing Crohn's disease later in life, according to a new study.
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What Happens When You Create a Chatbot to Memorialize a Friend Whenever we lose someone close to us, there's an inclination, a need even, to sort through our memories of that person. Memories not just in our minds, but our digital memories too--emails, texts, photos, videos, social ...
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Hunting the nearly un-huntable

Symmetry Magazine - 7 Oct 2016 18:56
The MINOS and Daya Bay experiments weigh in on the search for sterile neutrinos. In the 1990s, the Liquid Scintillator Neutrino Detector (LSND) experiment at Los Alamos National Laboratory saw intriguing hints of an undi...
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How Transformative Tech Can Bring Out the Best in Us All We now live in exponential times. Technological ability is accelerating. Communication is instant. Interconnection is global. Great change is coming hard and fast. To navigate these conditions, we need to be present, cre...
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A team of cancer specialists and health economists have developed a tool that can measure a patient's risk for, and ability to tolerate, the financial stress associated with treatment.
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PTSD experts agree that the condition has its roots in very real, physical processes within the brain - and not some sort of psychological "weakness". But no clear consensus has emerged about what exactly has gone "wrong...
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New research reveals endoglin as a critical factor in determining the fate of early undifferentiated cells during development. Endoglin, a receptor involved in cell signaling, has previously been known mostly for its fun...
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The Spooky Secret Behind Artificial Intelligence's Incredible Power Neural networks work so well because they roughly reflect the structure of the underlying universe around us, new research suggests.
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Different brain atrophy patterns may explain variability in Alzheimers disease symptoms Mathematical modeling of the brain scans of patients with Alzheimer's disease and others at risk for the devastating neurodegenerative disorder has identified specific patterns of brain atrophy that appear to be related ...
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The bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa can thrive in environments as different as the moist, warm tissue in our lungs, and the dry, nutrient-deprived surface of an office wall. Such adaptability makes it problematic in heal...
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Nurturing caregiving from a few consistent individuals helps to minimize the potential emotional and mental-health development issues that can arise from spending the early years of a child's life in an institution. With...
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New sensor material could enable more sensitive readings of biological signals Scientists have created a material that could make reading biological signals, from heartbeats to brainwaves, much more sensitive.
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Children of mothers who took vitamin D during pregnancy with resultant high levels of the vitamin in the umbilical blood have fewer symptoms of ADHD at the age of 2½ years.
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Mapping the 'dark matter' of human DNA

Science Daily - 7 Oct 2016 16:49
Mapping the 'dark matter' of human DNA Although our knowledge of the human DNA is extensive, it is nowhere near complete. For instance, our knowledge of exactly which changes in our DNA are responsible for a certain disease is often insufficient. This is rela...
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Great, Mysterious Balls of Fire Speed by Dying Star

Live Science - 7 Oct 2016 16:21
Great, Mysterious Balls of Fire Speed by Dying Star NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has seen planet-size cannonballs of hot gas whipping past a dying star, but the origin of these plasma balls remains a mystery.
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Hurricane Matthew - NASA Satellite Reveals Layers Of Storm In 3D | Video NASA's Global Precipitation Measurement Mission satellite observations of Hurricane Matthew on October 2, 2015 were converted into a 3D visualization "to look at how the strong convention is causing the storm to intensif...
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The spider tied its victim to the underside of a rock using strands of silk, before disemboweling it - this behaviour has never been seen in the wild before
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Responding to a call from the American Academy of Pediatrics to reduce hospital-acquired infections in neonatal intensive care units across the country, researchers have found a protein in breast milk to be a safe and ef...
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Vaccinating babies without vaccinating babies

Science Daily - 7 Oct 2016 14:56
Vaccinating babies without vaccinating babies Scientists have long understood that mother's milk provides immune protection against some infectious agents through the transfer of antibodies, a process referred to as "passive immunity." A research team now shows that...
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