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Science News

Location American Science News for 10 November 2017
A flexible material that generates electricity when stressed Researchers from Empa have developed a flexible material that generates electricity when stressed. In future, it might be used as a sensor, integrated into clothing or even implanted in the human body, for instance, to p...
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We thought walking in lock step made bridges sway, like London's Millennium Bridge when it opened. But it turns out crowd size matters more than rhythm
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Now Hear This: Ancient Amphitheater Acoustics Weren't So Great After All If you were sitting in the upper rows of an ancient Greek amphitheater, could you have heard the actors sigh or strike a match?
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Tiny Grasshopper Found Hidden in Van Gogh Painting, 128 Years Later The little bug was right there all along.
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Lasers that generate plasma can provide insight into bursts of subatomic particles that occur in deep space, scientists have found. Such findings could help scientists understand cosmic rays, solar flares and solar erupt...
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Watch a monkey floss its teeth with a bird feather

New Scientist - 10 Nov 2017 18:01
Nicobar long-tailed macaques have learned to use an array of tools, from wrapping prickly food in leaves to avoid getting hurt, to using bird feathers to floss their teeth
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The Dream of Regenerating the Body With Stem Cells Is Alive and Well To Bob Hariri, the body is a machine. Hariri is a surgeon, entrepreneur, and biomedical scientist. But perhaps it's his time flying jets that most strongly lends itself to such thinking. "I've been flying longer than any...
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IBM says it's reached milestone in quantum computing IBM has announced a milestone in its race against Google and other big tech firms to build a powerful quantum computer.
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3 Dangerous Ideas From Ray Kurzweil

Singularity Hub - 10 Nov 2017 17:00
3 Dangerous Ideas From Ray Kurzweil Recently, I interviewed my friend Ray Kurzweil at the Googleplex for a 90-minute webinar on disruptive and dangerous ideas, a prelude to my fireside chat with Ray at Abundance 360 this January. Ray is my friend and cofou...
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The path length of light in opaque media

Phys.org - 10 Nov 2017 16:48
The path length of light in opaque media A seemingly paradoxical prediction in physics has now been confirmed in an experiment: No matter whether an object is opaque or transparent, the average length of the light's paths through the object is always the same.
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Coconut crabs were thought to be purely opportunistic scavengers, but these huge arthropods are actually active predators that may dominate their island homes
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There are enough real benefits of medical marijuana, so why are people making them up? It's time to stop overhyping what weed can do
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Printed plastic solar cells should be able to harvest enough energy from indoor light to power your phone within the next few months
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LIGO mirror coatings get upgrade

Phys.org - 10 Nov 2017 15:37
Stanford scientists will lead a new national cooperative effort, the LIGO Scientific Collaboration Center for Coatings Research, to improve detection of gravitational waves at the twin LIGO facilities.
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Can You Turn Fat into Muscle?

Live Science - 10 Nov 2017 15:19
Can You Turn Fat into Muscle? Simply put, your body can't turn fat into muscle. And the reverse is also true: Your body can't turn muscle into fat, either. Here's why.
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Rather than gluten, fructan molecules seem to be to blame for sensitive guts. If true, gluten-free people could eat soy sauce and sourdough bread again
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Researchers develop practical superconducting nanowire single-photon detector with record detection efficiency Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) are significantly better at photon detection efficiency (DE) compared to their semiconducting counterparts, and have enabled many breakthrough applications in qua...
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Gay Lions? Not Quite

Live Science - 10 Nov 2017 12:33
Gay Lions? Not Quite Lions photographed in a same-sex embrace aren't having sex.
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Don't Bug Out! Your Cluttered Home Won't Attract Creepy-Crawlies Do you have a cluttered coffee table or a stack of boxes from that last move you've never gotten around to putting away? Good news -- your tendency toward untidiness isn't unhygienic.
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The Story Behind That Viral Photo of a Lonely Rhino

Live Science - 10 Nov 2017 11:02
The Story Behind That Viral Photo of a Lonely Rhino His name is Sudan, and he's been alone for awhile.
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Chemists May Have Found the 'Missing Link' to the First Life on Earth The search for the ancient chemical origins of life has a new candidate -- a multitasking enzyme that may have set the evolutionary ball rolling.
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(Lomonosov Moscow State University) Researchers from the Physics Department of Moscow State University and their colleagues have discovered a mechanism that allows gas sensors, based on nanocrystalline metal oxides, to w...
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