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Science News

Location American Science News for 6 December 2018
A persistent claim to have detected dark matter looks wrong NEGATIVE RESULTS are rarely reported widely. But they can be important. And this week sees one such--the possible demolition of what had been thought to be a sign of dark matter. Twenty years ago results from DAMA, a par...
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Friendly electromagnetic pulse improves survival for electronics An electromagnetic pulse, or EMP, emitted by a nuclear weapon exploded high above the United States could disable the electronic circuits of many devices vital to military defense and modern living.
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Facebook used to "move fast and break things", but now everything is broken. Here's what governments can do to reign in the tech giants
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Drawing is Better than Writing for Memory Retention

Neuroscience News - 6 Dec 2018 22:19
Researchers report older adults who take up drawing are better able to retain new information than those who write notes.
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Using quantum entanglement to study proteins

Phys.org - 6 Dec 2018 21:04
Using quantum entanglement to study proteins For the first time, a University of Michigan chemist has used quantum entanglement to examine protein structures, a process that requires only a very small number of photons of light.
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A machine learning system called AlphaZero is the first AI that can learn to master more than one game using the same algorithm - it can play Go, chess and shogi
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Engineers demonstrate mechanics of making foam with bubbles in distinct sizes It's easy to make bubbles, but try making hundreds of thousands of them a minute--all the same size.
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'Chemo Brain' May Result from Effects on 'Helper Cells.' The Finding Could Lead to Possible Treatments. A new study provides insight into how certain chemotherapy drugs affect brain cells. The study also identified a potential new treatment for "chemo brain."
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A skeleton found decades ago in South Africa may be a new species of Australopithecus, and could help reveal when our ancestors evolved to walk on two feet
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Ancient, Unknown Strain of Plague Found in 5,000-Year-Old Tomb in Sweden In a nearly 5,000-year-old tomb in Sweden, researchers have discovered the oldest-known strain of the notorious bacterium Yersinia pestis.
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House geckos are too big to float using surface tension, and too small to create enough force to walk across water, so they use a combination of these tricks
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Like humans, parrots have big brains and good communication skills - now we know the DNA regulating parrot and human brain development evolved in a similar way
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Gut bacteria may offer a treatment for autism

The Economist - 6 Dec 2018 17:42
Gut bacteria may offer a treatment for autism AUTISM AFFECTS people's social behaviour and communication, and may impair their ability to learn things. All this is well known. Less familiar to most, though, are the gastrointestinal problems associated with the condi...
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Capturing spray from flash-boiling liquid jets Ultrafast video capture of droplet cloud formation should help minimize the risk of gas-leak explosions.
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The Promise--and Complications--of Domestic Robots

Singularity Hub - 6 Dec 2018 17:00
The Promise--and Complications--of Domestic Robots Every year, for just a few days in a major city, a small team of roboticists get to live the dream: ordering around their own personal robot butlers. In carefully-constructed replicas of a restaurant scene or a domestic ...
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The news of gene-edited twins is more likely to have a chilling effect on research into the technique used than to open the floodgates to millions more edited babies
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Top quark couture

Symmetry Magazine - 6 Dec 2018 15:51
Top quark couture What do you give a physicist who helped discover a fundamental particle and jump-started your science career? When Evan Coleman was wrapping up his undergraduate studies in physics at Brown University, he wanted to find ...
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Student engineers an interaction between two qubits using photons In the world of quantum computing, interaction is everything.
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Is the U.S. Lagging in the Quest for Quantum Computing?

Scientific American - 6 Dec 2018 15:00
Is the U.S. Lagging in the Quest for Quantum Computing? U.S. government funding is needed to sustain the arduous journey toward a practical quantum computer, experts say --
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Researchers examine competing states in high-temperature superconductors High-temperature superconductors can transport electrical energy without resistance. Researchers at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) have carried out high-resolution inelastic X-ray scattering and have found that ...
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Astronomers Think They've Figured Out the Raging Swirls of Gas Around Supermassive Black Holes Churning, hellish, hot-cold gas storms swirl around our universe's supermassive black holes. But the scientists involved in discovering them would prefer you call them "fountains."
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A Common Virus May Be Linked to Heart Problems in Fetuses A common virus that typically causes only mild symptoms in adults might lead to heart defects in developing human fetuses
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