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Science News

Location American Science News for 1 June 2020
Geometry of intricately fabricated glass makes light trap itself Laser light traveling through ornately microfabricated glass has been shown to interact with itself to form self-sustaining wave patterns called solitons. The intricate design fabricated in the glass is a type of "photon...
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'Black nitrogen': Researchers discover new high-pressure material and solve a puzzle of the periodic table In the periodic table of elements there is one golden rule for carbon, oxygen and other light elements: Under high pressures, they have similar structures to heavier elements in the same group of elements. But nitrogen a...
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Carbon Nanotube Transistors May Soon Give Waning Moore's Law a Boost Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have long been touted as a potential material to take us beyond the limits of faltering silicon chips, but they’ve proven tricky to manufacture. Now scientists have demonstrated a way to build C...
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New properties of cosmic rays, silicon, magnesium and neon found by Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer aboard ISS A very large team of researchers from around the globe has found new properties of the cosmic rays silicon, magnesium and neon using data from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer aboard the International Space Station. In th...
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(Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology) 'TurboRVB' is a first-principles quantum Monte Carlo software package developed by Prof. Sandro Sorella (SISSA/Italy) and his collaborators. Very recently, Assist. Pro...
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Half the matter in the universe was missing. Scientists just found it hiding in the cosmos. Scientists just found the universe's missing baryon matter hiding in the cosmos.
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Scientists capture the world's deepest octopus on video. And it's adorable. The octopus was found miles beneath the ocean surface.
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Nazi diary reveals secret location of WWII treasure under a palace in Poland A long-hidden diary written by a Nazi officer may point to the location of a treasure stash that includes more than 30 tons of buried gold.
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Study reveals specific brain wave patterns that underlie the ability to remove irrelevant learned associations to make way for new, updated information. The research shows a particular behavior can be dependent on the sy...
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Who created the polio vaccine?

Live Science - 1 Jun 2020 19:19
Who created the polio vaccine? In the early 1950s, Dr. Jonas Salk and Dr. Albert Sabin each found a way to protect the world from poliomyelitis, the paralysis-causing disease commonly known as polio. Here's how they did it.
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How ketamine combats depression

Neuroscience News - 1 Jun 2020 18:52
Ketamine increases the number of serotonin 1B receptors. Ketamine binds to serotonin 1B receptors, reducing the release of serotonin and increasing the release of dopamine.
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As coronavirus lockdown restrictions are lifted in England, critics say the UK government is moving too quickly and that contact tracing systems designed to slow the spread of the virus aren't yet ready
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Theoretical breakthrough shows quantum fluids rotate by corkscrew mechanism If a drop of creamer falls from a spoon into a swirling cup of coffee, the whirlpool drags the drop into rotation. But what would happen if the coffee had no friction--no way to pull the drop into a synchronized spin?
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When employees work in an office with more natural light they perform better in strategic thinking tests and sleep 37 minutes more per night on average
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Developing a digital holography-based multimodal imaging system to visualize living cells A research group led by Kobe University's Professor MATOBA Osamu (Organization for Advanced and Integrated Research) has successfully created 3-D fluorescence and phase imaging of living cells based on digital holography...
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Orbital ordering triggers nucleation-growth behavior of electrons in an inorganic solid A new study by researchers from Waseda University and the University of Tokyo found that orbital ordering in a vanadate compound exhibits a clear nucleation-growth behavior.
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Here's how plants became meat eaters

Live Science - 1 Jun 2020 14:12
Here's how plants became meat eaters Carnivorous plants began evolving about 70 million years ago, when an ancestor duplicated its entire genome, allowing some genes to be repurposed for hunting.
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Particles trapped in twisted materials and quantum fingerprints identified A paper by the Quantum Photonics Lab at Heriot-Watt, published today in top-tier Nature Materials, identifies how to trap interlayer excitons (IXs) and their quantum fingerprints. The IXs are trapped by the interaction o...
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Live Science podcast In this episode of Life's Little Mysteries, we'll take a closer look at an involuntary bodily function that can sometimes be a little explosive: sneezing.
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Research in baboons suggests that misfolded proteins linked to Parkinson’s disease can travel from the brain to gut and vice versa – with both routes causing equal amounts of brain cell death
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(Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences) Researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and MIT have developed pop-up shoe grips, inspired by snak...
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(Peking University) Realizing multiple dissipationless edge states and increasing the working temperature of Chern insulator states are not only the most important research topics in physical sciences, but also expected ...
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