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Science News

Location American Science News for 29 September 2017

Robotic Farm Completes 1st Fully Autonomous Harvest

Live Science - 29 Sep 2017 08:11
Robotic Farm Completes 1st Fully Autonomous Harvest It's harvest season in many parts of the world, but on one farm in the United Kingdom, robots -- not humans -- are doing all the heavy lifting.
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Intel Jumps Into Brain-Like Computing With New Self-Learning Chip The brain has long inspired the design of computers and their software. Now Intel has become the latest tech company to decide that mimicking the brain's hardware could be the next stage in the evolution of computing. On...
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Astronauts to Flat-Earther B.o.B: We've Seen the Curve Some former astronauts have a message for flat-Earther B.o.B: The curve is real, and we've seen it.
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Homing in on How Supermassive Black Holes Formed

Scientific American - 29 Sep 2017 13:15
Homing in on How Supermassive Black Holes Formed Astronomers have a new model for the origin of these impossibly primitive cosmic monsters --
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UV-irradiated amorphous ice behaves like liquid at low temperatures Ice analogs mimicking interstellar ice behave like liquids at temperatures between -210°C and -120°C according to Hokkaido University researchers. This liquid-like ice may enhance the formation of organic compounds inc...
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Particle accelerators have opened a unique window into the subatomic world, revealing some of the most fundamental components of our universe. In the last ten years, CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has taken us to new...
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Harvey's Floodwaters Tied to Woman's Deadly 'Flesh-Eating' Bacteria Infection A woman in Houston contracted "flesh-eating bacteria" from water that flooded her home during Hurricane Harvey.
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Czar's Treasures? Mystery 'Antiques' Sent to US at End of Cold War Mysterious shipments of "antiques" and art that are worth incredible sums of money were shipped to the United States in 1991 and 1992, according to documents obtained by Live Science.
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Desert Tarantulas: Photos of the Amazing Arachnids of the Sonoran Desert One unique arachnid found not only in the Sonoran Desert but also in the Mojave and Chihuahuan deserts is the desert tarantula. Check out these amazing photos of desert tarantulas.
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Photos: Viking-Age Fortress Unearthed in Denmark

Live Science - 29 Sep 2017 17:04
Photos: Viking-Age Fortress Unearthed in Denmark The Viking-age fortress is likely part of a network of military sites built by the 10th-century Danish king Harald Bluetooth.
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Getting to the heart of mapping arrhythmia-related excitations Atrial fibrillation is the most prevalent form of cardiac arrhythmia, affecting up to 6 million people in the U.S. alone. Common treatments for severe forms of the erratic beating phenomenon are controversial, and guided...
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Facts About Carbon

Live Science - 29 Sep 2017 16:51
Facts About Carbon Carbon is one of the most abundant elements and forms a very large number of compounds, including carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and carbon disulfide.
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Hurricane Maria is long gone but almost all of Puerto Rico has been left without a power supply, and restarting the national grid from scratch will be very difficult
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Photos: Carvings Depict Maya Ballplayers in Action

Live Science - 29 Sep 2017 16:07
Photos: Carvings Depict Maya Ballplayers in Action Two large stone carvings, each the size of breakfast tables, depict an incredible action scene: Maya ballplayers lunging forward, wearing distinctive ballplayer belts.
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Who Were the Vandals?

Live Science - 29 Sep 2017 16:04
Who Were the Vandals? The Vandals were a "barbarian" Germanic people who sacked Rome. The name has become a synonym for destruction.
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Elon Musk Wants Giant SpaceX Spaceship to Fly People to Mars by 2024 Elon Musk wants his company SpaceX to start robotic Mars flights by 2022 and land people on the Red Planet in 2024 using a giant "BFR" spaceship that could also fly to the moon, Earth orbit and other places on our planet...
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Searching for the best 3-D-printing materials

Phys.org - 29 Sep 2017 14:28
Searching for the best 3-D-printing materials TU Wien is conducting research into high-precision 3-D printing technology. Now, a new method is enabling researchers to look for suitable materials with greater precision than ever.
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The adhesion of unicellular alga Chlamydomonas to surfaces is light-dependent Sunlight allows green algae to do more than just carry out photosynthesis. Some unicellular algae actually use light to switch the adhesion of their flagella to surfaces on and off - a phenomenon first discovered by phys...
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Turning ions into quantum cats

Phys.org - 29 Sep 2017 13:52
Turning ions into quantum cats In Schrödinger's famous thought experiment, a cat seems to be both dead and alive--an idea that strains credulity. These days, cats still don't act this way, but physicists now regularly create analogues of Schrödinger...
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Aaron Hernandez's 'Severe' CTE: How Does It Progress So Quickly? Former NFL player Aaron Hernandez had a severe case of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), but how did his condition progress so quickly?
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Rare 'Functional Amnesia' Gets 1st Comprehensive Study A new study sheds light on a type of amnesia that's psychological in origin.
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Zeroing In on How Supermassive Black Holes Formed

Scientific American - 29 Sep 2017 13:15
Zeroing In on How Supermassive Black Holes Formed Astronomers have a new model for the origin of these impossibly primitive cosmic monsters --
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