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Science News

Location American Science News for 12 October 2017
Why the World Is (Still) Better Than You Think--New Evidence For Abundance Your mindset matters -- now more than ever. We are in the midst of a drug epidemic. The drug? Negative news. The drug pushers? The media. As I wrote in Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think, we pay 10x more ...
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Inferno Down Below: Satellites Reveal Burning California Wildfires An animation of satellite images shows plumes of dense, gray smoke rising from wildfires burning in multiple locations in California.
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The most detailed study yet of orgasm brain activity has discovered why climaxing makes women feel less pain, and shown that 'switching off' isn't necessary.
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Xenon takes a turn in the LHC

Symmetry Magazine - 12 Oct 2017 23:21
Xenon takes a turn in the LHC For the first time, the Large Hadron Collider is accelerating xenon nuclei for experiments. Most of the year, the Large Hadron Collider at CERN collides protons. LHC scientists have also accelerated lead nuclei stripped ...
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An analysis of genetic variation and skin pigmentation suggests that some particularly dark skin tones evolved relatively recently from paler genetic variants
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Using a jet of radio waves, astronomers have begun to map the other side of the Milky Way. Within 10 years we could have a complete map of the entire galaxy
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Quantifying Chaos to Understand Liquids

Physics Buzz - 12 Oct 2017 20:09
For those readers in regions where autumn is quickly approaching, a pumpkin spice latte might be just the thing to help you relax. As scientists like Moupriya Das and Jason R. Green from the University of Massachusetts B...
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Laser cavities take on new shapes and functionalities Researchers have demonstrated the first laser cavity that can confine and propagate light in any shape imaginable, even pathways with sharp bends and angles. The new cavity, called a topological cavity, could enable lase...
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Spotting the spin of the Majorana fermion under the microscope Researchers at Princeton University have detected a unique quantum property of an elusive particle notable for behaving simultaneously like matter and antimatter. The particle, known as the Majorana fermion, is prized by...
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Smart Move? What Trump's IQ Contest Would Really Show After Secretary of State Rex Tillerson allegedly called President Donald Trump a moron back in July, the president boasted that he would score higher on an IQ test than Tillerson. But that may not mean as much as the pre...
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Long Sleeves on Doctors' White Coats May Spread Germs Doctors may want to roll up their sleeves before work, literally.
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The discovery that a cavefish might have lost its sight because key eye genes were switched off via epigenetics, rather than mutation, will fuel an evolutionary debate
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The discovery that a cavefish lost its sight because key eye genes were switched off via epigenetics, rather than mutation, will fuel an evolutionary debate
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A fossil salamander that lived at least 34 million years ago is in such good condition that the remains of a frog it ate are still in its digestive tract
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What eyes and odours reveal about sexual attraction

The Economist - 12 Oct 2017 16:50
What eyes and odours reveal about sexual attraction The eyes have it DO MEN, in essence, marry their mothers, and women their fathers? And do they also choose mates by smell in a way that is likely to result in healthy offspring? These are both old hypotheses and both hav...
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Offshore wind farms will change life in the sea

The Economist - 12 Oct 2017 16:50
Offshore wind farms will change life in the sea Fresh from the wind farm IN THE North Sea, wind power is booming. At the moment the world's biggest offshore wind farm, with a capacity of 630MW, sits in the Thames Estuary. But the London Array, as this farm is known, w...
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One of the world's oldest products faces the digital future AFTER 4,000 years of development, you might assume that just about everything there is to be known about glassmaking has already been found out. Not so. Though the basic recipe of sand, soda and lime remains the industry...
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The biggest source of harm was particulate matter from domestic stoves, but nitrogen dioxide from cars is also linked to many premature deaths
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In a first for wearable optics, researchers develop stretchy fiber to capture body motion The exciting applications of wearable sensors have sparked a tremendous amount of research and business investment in recent years. Sensors attached to the body or integrated into clothing could allow athletes and physic...
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Study shows how rough microparticles can cause big problems New research from North Carolina State University, MIT and the University of Michigan finds that the surface texture of microparticles in a liquid suspension can cause internal friction that significantly alters the susp...
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Fluctuating environments can help cooperating bacteria Cooperating bacterial populations are more likely to survive in changing habitats, new research shows.
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The hidden mechanics of magnetic field reconnection, a key factor in solar storms and fusion energy reactors In July 2012, a powerful solar storm almost struck Earth. Scientists estimate that had the storm, called a coronal mass ejection (CME), hit the planet, the impact would have crippled power grids worldwide, burning out tr...
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