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Science News

Location American Science News for 5 May 2020
Leaked White House document projects COVID-19 deaths will skyrocket An internal administration report predicts a grim trajectory, even as the president pushes for the country to reopen.
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'Magnetic Star' Radio Waves Could Solve the Mystery of Fast Radio Bursts The surprise detection of a radio burst from a neutron star in our galaxy might reveal the origin of a bigger cosmological phenomenon --
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New ultrafast camera takes 70 trillion pictures per second Just about everyone has had the experience of blinking while having their picture taken. The camera clicks, your eyes shut, and by the time they open again, the photo is ruined. A new ultrafast camera developed at Caltec...
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Study: Could dark matter be hiding in existing data? Dark matter has so far defied every type of detector designed to find it. Because of its huge gravitational footprint in space, we know dark matter must make up about 85 percent of the total mass of the universe, but we ...
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The reason why we sleep remains an unresolved question of the 21st century. Research now shows that the depth of non-rapid-eye-movement (nonREM) sleep in humans is associated with different genetic versions of a gene tha...
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Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, N95 face masks have been in short supply. Health care workers, in particular, desperately need these masks to protect themselves from the respiratory droplets of infected pati...
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Health care workers carry a significant burden of coronavirus infections worldwide, but a new evidence review shows the rate can be lowered with the use of personal protective equipment combined with proper training in i...
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Small red blood cells could indicate cancer

Science Daily - 5 May 2020 22:46
Having abnormally small red blood cells - a condition known as microcytosis - could indicate cancer, according to new research.
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The opioid crisis and other social issues have left millions of US grandparents raising their grandchildren. A new study offers a framework to help social workers develop best practices for grandfamilies, addressing the ...
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What can researchers do when their mathematical models of the spread of infectious diseases don't match real-world data? One research team is working on a solution.
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A study of female astronauts has assessed the risk of blood clots associated with spaceflight. The study examines the potential risk factors for developing a blood clot (venous thromboembolism) in space.
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Using the now-decommissioned Titan supercomputer, a team of researchers estimated the combined consequences of many different extreme climate events at the county level, a unique approach that provided unprecedented regi...
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Researchers have found that the potato, primarily known as a starchy vegetable, can be a source of high-quality protein that helps to maintain muscle.
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Despite the seemingly pervasive opinion that millennial physicians are more prone to burnout and a lack of empathy compared to older generations, a new study of 588 millennial and Generation X residents found that no suc...
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Older adults with low intake of foods and drinks containing flavonoids, such as berries, apples, and tea, were more likely to develop Alzheimer's disease and related dementias over 20 years, compared with people who cons...
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Coronavirus structure clue to high infection rate

Science Daily - 5 May 2020 18:16
Researchers studying the structure of the virus that causes COVID-19 have found a unique feature that could explain why it is so transmissible between people.
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(DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory) Two decades ago, an experiment at Brookhaven National Laboratory pinpointed a mysterious mismatch between established particle physics theory and actual lab measurements. A multi-inst...
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(RMIT University) Built as part of the sustainable features of a new Australian building, the specially-designed solar chimney radically boosts safe evacuation time in a fire - from 2 minutes to over 14 minutes.
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(Johannes Gutenberg Universitaet Mainz) Several drugs approved for treating hepatitis C viral infection were identified as potential candidates against COVID-19, a new disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus. This i...
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Recently recovered COVID-19 patients produce varying virus-specific antibodies Recovered coronavirus patients show a wide range of immune responses following the infection, with about half from a current study showing sustained antibodies two weeks later. Results indicate which parts of the virus a...
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Being in the wrong place can set off an allergic reaction

Neuroscience News - 5 May 2020 23:10
Being in the wrong place can set off an allergic reaction Allergic reactions can be triggered with, or without, exposure to the allergen as the result of a psychologically conditioned reaction. The findings explain why some allergic reactions are observed as a form of placebo r...
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How to see the last supermoon of 2020

Live Science - 5 May 2020 23:06
How to see the last supermoon of 2020 Even if you're stuck indoors during the pandemic, you can still catch May's full moon, also known as the flower moon.
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