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Science News

Location American Science News for 20 October 2017
Snake Head Pops Out of Frog's Maw in Mesmerizing Photo In a stunning frog photo recently shared widely from Reddit, a swallowed snake isn't going down without a fight.
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Something strange is happening on dwarf planets Eris and Makemake. They're tiny and cold, but they still show surprising signs of geologic activity, like real planets
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A mathematical leap has let IBM simulate a 56-qubit quantum computer on a traditional machine, the biggest yet on a classical computer
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Spanking children doesn't make them better behaved - but it can put them at risk of mental illness, and should be outlawed everywhere
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Climate change will harm corals by overheating them and unleashing more violent hurricanes, but cooling the planet by geoengineering could reverse those effects
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To Uber or Not? Why Car Ownership May No Longer Be a Good Deal Every day there's more news about the inevitable arrival of autonomous vehicles. At the same time, more people are using ride-hailing and ride-sharing apps, and the percentage of teens getting their driver's license cont...
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A step closer to understanding quantum mechanics: Physicists develop a new quantum simulation protocol For most everyday experiences, such as riding a bicycle, using a lift or catching a ball, classical (Newtonian) mechanics is perfectly accurate.
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High field magnet at BER II: Insight into a hidden order A specific uranium compound has puzzled researchers for thirty years. Although the crystal structure is simple, no one understands exactly what is happening once it is cooled below a certain temperature. Apparently, a 'h...
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Church that Worships AI God May Be the Way of the Future A former Google and Uber engineer wants to establish Way of the Future, a religious group dedicated to a "godhead based on artificial intelligence."
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Using supercomputers to delve into the building blocks of matter Nuclear physicists are known for their atom-smashing explorations of the building blocks of visible matter. At the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a particle collider at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Broo...
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Gamma rays reach beyond the limits of light

Phys.org - 20 Oct 2017 14:24
Gamma rays reach beyond the limits of light Researchers have discovered a highly efficient way to produce high energy photon beams. The obtained energy is a billion times higher than the energy of photons in visible light. These high-intensity gamma rays significa...
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Male tui songbirds signal their prowess with complicated songs, so they respond aggressively when they hear a particularly good vocalist
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It can take years to diagnose extreme period pain as endometriosis. The longer it goes untreated, the more it affects fertility - could a spit test change that?
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10 years of the trapped rainbow--the revolution of slow light A decade on from suggesting light can be dramatically slowed - or even stopped - by new materials, Ortwin Hess reviews the progress and applications.
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Solid or liquid? Researcher proposes a new definition of glass Is glass a solid or a liquid? This question, which has been vigorously debated by specialists in the field for some decades, has just been answered anew: "Glass is a non-equilibrium, non-crystalline state of matter that ...
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Supercomputer simulation of chaotic circuits

Phys.org - 20 Oct 2017 12:05
Supercomputer simulation of chaotic circuits It's really surprising that many simple electronic circuits built of just a few components behave chaotically, in an extremely complicated, practically unpredictable manner. Physicists from the Institute of Nuclear Physi...
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Sea Lilies on Twitter Are Mesmerizing ... And Not What They Seem Amazing images and GIFs making the rounds on Twitter reveal little-known marine creatures.
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Woman's 'Missing' IUD Turns Up in Her Bladder

Live Science - 20 Oct 2017 09:32
Woman's 'Missing' IUD Turns Up in Her Bladder A woman's IUD that appeared to be "missing" from her uterus turned up in an unusual place: her bladder.
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City-Size Lunar Lava Tube Could House Future Astronaut Residents A city-size lava tube has been discovered on the moon, and researchers say it could serve as a shelter for lunar astronauts.
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When Your Body Needs Nourishment, Your Brain Eats First Even if you're a generous person who believes in sharing, helping the needy and spreading wealth, your brain is a selfish glutton.
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54-Million-Year-Old Baby Sea Turtle Had Built-In Sunscreen An extraordinarily well-preserved fossil of a young sea turtle that lived 54 million years ago contains molecules of dark pigments that would have protected the animal from the sun.
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(The City University of New York) The Graduate Center (GC) of the City University of New York (CUNY) has entered into a joint endeavor with Princeton University to explore the interface between biology and physics throug...
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