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Science News

Location American Science News for 5 March 2018
An algorithm can reconstruct pictures a person is looking at from brain scans, could one day be used to tell what someone is thinking
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Two atomically thin layers of graphene can be misaligned just slightly to produce a superconductive material for super-efficient energy delivery
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(NYU Tandon School of Engineering) Nanomaterials esearchers have devised a method to significantly improve the efficiency of organic solar cells. They used a squaraine molecule to both donate electrons and better orient ...
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Neutrons provide new polish for petroleum processing and more University of Notre Dame researchers are using neutrons at the Department of Energy's (DOE's) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) to study how specialized molecules might improve petroleum production processes, as well ...
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Q&A: Jogesh Rout

Symmetry Magazine - 5 Mar 2018 20:04
What's it like being a theoretical neutrino physicist working on the Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility? How do you build the biggest physics experiment ever constructed in the United States? With a lot of help from interna...
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FlatScope: Team designs lens-free fluorescent microscope Lenses are no longer necessary for some microscopes, according to Rice University engineers developing FlatScope, a thin fluorescent microscope whose abilities promise to surpass those of old-school devices.
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Why 17 People Volunteered to Be Infected with Parasitic Worms At a university hospital in the Netherlands, 17 students have a tropical parasitic disease.
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Technique to see objects hidden around corners A driverless car is making its way through a winding neighborhood street, about to make a sharp turn onto a road where a child's ball has just rolled. Although no person in the car can see that ball, the car stops to avo...
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Hyperloop and Flying Cars Are Battling It Out for the Future of Transportation Tech titans are eager to reimagine how we will travel in the coming decades, but whose vision will win out? Last week Elon Musk and Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi got in a back-and-forth on Twitter over whether flying cars w...
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Team invents new way to 'see' the quantum world JILA scientists have invented a new imaging technique that produces rapid, precise measurements of quantum behavior in an atomic clock in the form of near-instant visual art.
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Bizarre, Parasitic 'Fairy Lantern' Reappears in the Rainforest After 151 Years A strange plant that needs no sunlight and sucks on underground fungi for nutrients has turned up in Borneo, Malaysia, 151 years after the last time a scientist found it.
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Rare remains show a primitive shrimp-like creature apparently caring for four juveniles - the oldest example of parental care in the fossil record
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Rare remains show a primitive shrimp-like creature apparently caring for four juveniles - the oldest example of parental care in the fossil record
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The nucleus--coming soon in 3-D

Phys.org - 5 Mar 2018 15:36
The nucleus--coming soon in 3-D Physicians have long used CT scans to get 3-D imagery of the inner workings of the human body. Now, physicists are working toward getting their first CT scans of the inner workings of the nucleus. A measurement of quarks...
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Is Earth's Missing Xenon Hidden in the Core?

Live Science - 5 Mar 2018 15:03
Is Earth's Missing Xenon Hidden in the Core? Earth's xenon is missing. But a new experiment suggests it might have been right under our feet all along.
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Experts Are Stumped by the Toad with a Stump for a Face Why does this toad have no face?
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1.6-Billion-Year-Old Breath of Life Frozen in Stone

Live Science - 5 Mar 2018 13:23
1.6-Billion-Year-Old Breath of Life Frozen in Stone Tiny voids in rock are the exhalations of ancient microbes.
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Why DARPA Wants to 'Freeze' Soldiers on the Battlefield A new military program aims to develop treatments that slow down the body's biochemical reactions, to buy time for battlefield injuries.
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Remains of US Pilot from WWII Found at the Bottom of Pacific Ocean More than 70 years ago, during World War II, a U.S. pilot was shot down as he was flying over the Pacific. Over the decades, sand and sea life at the bottom of the ocean covered the wreckage, further obscuring it from vi...
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People at Boston Children's Hospital are taking tours of their own digestive tracts. Their doctor can point out anomalies and what they'll do to fix them
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When science is done by TV press release, it is science that usually comes off worst - just ask a geneticist studying skin colour
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Why Can Some People 'Hear' Colors?

Live Science - 5 Mar 2018 10:00
Why Can Some People 'Hear' Colors? About 4 percent of the people on Earth experience a mysterious phenomenon called synesthesia.
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