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Science News

Location American Science News for 12 November 2018
Atomic parity violation research reaches new milestone A reflection always reproduces objects as a complete mirror image, rather than just its individual parts or individual parts in a completely different orientation. It's all or nothing, the mirror can't reflect just a lit...
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Inspired by earthworms, new breathing material lubricates itself when needed Earthworms are always clean, even if they come from moist, sticky soil. They owe this to a dirt-repellent, lubricating layer, which forms itself again and again on its skin. Researchers at INM have now artificially recre...
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Nitrogen fixation in ambient conditions

EurekAlert! - 12 Nov 2018 07:00
(Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne) EPFL scientists have developed a uranium-based complex that allows nitrogen fixation reactions to take place in ambient conditions. The work lays the foundation to develop new...
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Jamaica was once home to a sloth-like monkey - now we know it was a strange descendant of South America's titi monkeys that adapted to island life
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Lack of Exercise Impacts Mental Health

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2018 21:22
Researchers report exercise helps improve overall health and mental health.
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Study reports audiovisual editing causes an increase in activity in visual processing areas, while continuous and orderly editing produces more cognitive processing activity.
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Seeing Red in Live Brain Function

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2018 21:16
Researchers have identified a new fluorescent protein that makes it possible for live neurons to glow red when activated.
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New Insights Into the Aging Brain

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2018 21:13
A new study reports klotho, a protein associated with longevity, acts as a gatekeeper that helps shield the brain from the peripheral immune system.
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Quantum leap for mass as science redefines the kilogramme Sealed in a vault beneath a duke's former pleasure palace among the sycamore-streaked forests west of Paris sits an object the size of an apple that determines the weight of the world.
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Alzheimer's Genetically Linked to Cardiovascular Disease

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2018 19:16
Researchers have identified specific points on chromosome 11 that increase the risks of developing both cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer's. The study reports managing cholesterol and triglyceride levels could help to...
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Dickinsonia lived about 560 million years ago and may have been the first animal - but it seems to have inflated its body in a way no animals do today
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Breaking Out of the Corporate Bubble With Uncommon Partners For big companies, success is a blessing and a curse. You don't get big without doing something (or many things) very right. It might start with an invention or service the world didn't know it needed. Your product takes...
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Tens of Cat Mummies and 100 Cat Statues Found Near Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Ancient Egyptians seem to have been "cat people," or at least cat mummy people.
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Hacking the Mind Just Got Easier With These New Tools

Singularity Hub - 12 Nov 2018 18:00
Hacking the Mind Just Got Easier With These New Tools For eons, the only way to access the three-pound mushy bio-computer between our ears was to physically crack the skull, or insert a sharp object up the nose. Lucky for us, these examples of medical barbarism have been re...
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Innovative approach to controlling magnetism opens route to ultra-low-power microchips A new approach to controlling magnetism in a microchip could open the doors to memory, computing, and sensing devices that consume drastically less power than existing versions. The approach could also overcome some of t...
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Physicists build fractal shape out of electrons In physics, it is well-known that electrons behave very differently in three dimensions, two dimensions or one dimension. These behaviours give rise to different possibilities for technological applications and electroni...
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Next to Pluto's heart-shaped plains are strange rolling hills unlike anything we've seen on Earth, and they may be left over from receding ancient glaciers
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Now You Can Listen to the Moon Landing

Physics Buzz - 12 Nov 2018 17:48
On July 20, 1969, just before 11 p.m. Eastern time, Neil Armstrong planted the first human footprints on another world. It was a defining moment in a journey that had transfixed the planet. Astronaut Buzz Aldrin carrying...
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Strongest Evidence Yet That Obesity Causes Depression

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2018 17:37
A new study reports obesity can significantly increase the risk of depression, even in the absence of other health problems.
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Scale of California's Deadly Camp Fire Shown in Satellite Photos As wildfires continue to burn in California, new satellite photos show the sheer scale of the deadly Camp Fire that has devastated the state's northern town of Paradise.
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Unified theory explains two characteristic features of frustrated magnets For the first time, physicists present a unified theory explaining two characteristic features of frustrated magnets and why they're often seen together.
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Keto, Mediterranean or Vegan: Which Diet Is Best for the Heart? How do these three diets stack up against each other when it comes to heart health?
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