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Science News

Location American Science News for 16 October 2020
Bird flies 7,500 miles nonstop, breaking world record A bar-tailed godwit just flew for 11 days straight from Alaska to New Zealand.
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The Most Effective Drugs for Common Type of Neuropathic Pain

Neuroscience News - 17 Oct 2020 00:33
The Most Effective Drugs for Common Type of Neuropathic Pain A study of four drugs to combat chronic neuropathic pain finds Nortriptyline has the highest efficacious percentage and lowest quit rate.
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A biologist tracking a 4-metre-long python in Australia warned local residents to be on their guard - but one woman woke to find the snake trying to eat her
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NASA's About to Try Grabbing a Chunk of Asteroid to Bring to Earth--and You Can Watch If you've seen the movie The Martian, you no doubt remember the rescue scene, in which (spoiler alert!) Matt Damon launches himself off Mars in a stripped-down rocket in hopes of his carefully-calculated trajectory takin...
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A study of women born in the Netherlands between 1812 and 1874 adds to the evidence that the daughters of older mothers may be slightly less fertile
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Zeptoseconds: New world record in short time measurement In 1999, the Egyptian chemist Ahmed Zewail received the Nobel Prize for measuring the speed at which molecules change their shape. He founded femtochemistry using ultrashort laser flashes: the formation and breakup of ch...
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Ultrafast camera films 3-D movies at 100 billion frames per second In his quest to bring ever-faster cameras to the world, Caltech's Lihong Wang has developed technology that can reach blistering speeds of 70 trillion frames per second, fast enough to see light travel. Just like the cam...
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In specially coated tubes, the more viscous a liquid is, the faster it flows It's widely known that thick, viscous liquids--like honey--flow more slowly than low-viscosity liquids, like water. Researchers were surprised to find this behavior flipped on its head when the liquids flow through chemi...
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The latest coronavirus news updated every day including coronavirus cases, the latest news, features and interviews from New Scientist and essential information about the covid-19 pandemic
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Research team discovers uniquely quantum effect in erasing information Researchers from Trinity have discovered a uniquely quantum effect in erasing information that may have significant implications for the design of quantum computing chips. Their surprising discovery brings back to life t...
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Slowing light in an optical cavity with mechanical resonators and mirrors Theoretical physicists Kamran Ullah and Hameed Ullah have shown that a position-dependent mass optomechanical system involving a cavity between two mirrors, one attached to a resonator, can enhance induced transparency a...
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Weird venomous caterpillars that look like walking toupées are invading Virginia Pus caterpillars have among the most venomous stings of any animal in the United States. And they're having a boom year in Virginia.
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A new ultrafast control scheme of ferromagnet for energy-efficient data storage The digital data generated around the world every year is now counted in zettabytes, or trillions of billions of bytes--equivalent to delivering data for hundreds of millions of books every second. The amount of data gen...
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Thin tissue grafts and flexible electronics have a host of applications for wound healing, regenerative medicine and biosensing. A new device inspired by an octopus's sucker rapidly transfers delicate tissue or electroni...
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Study Explains the Process That Exacerbates Multiple Sclerosis Recovery from multiple sclerosis-like symptoms in mice depends upon the ability for microglia to break down the remains of damaged cells.
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Remdesivir has 'no meaningful impact' on COVID-19 survival, huge study finds Patients given the drug did not show a significant decrease in mortality, risk of ventilation or time in the hospital.
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Gel instrumental in 3-D bioprinting biological tissues The eventual creation of replacement biological parts requires fully three-dimensional capabilities that two-dimensional and three-dimensional thin-film bioprinting cannot supply. Now, using a yield stress gel, Penn Stat...
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10,000-year-old footprints show journey of squirmy toddler and caregiver A nearly mile-long set of tracks across the playa of the desert Southwest reveals the journey of a caregiver and a toddler more than 10,000 years ago.
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Only two northern white rhinos remain. And they're both female. Sadly, this success story only stretches as far as the southern subspecies of the white rhino.
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Early Trauma Influences Metabolism Across Generations

Neuroscience News - 16 Oct 2020 23:22
Early Trauma Influences Metabolism Across Generations Early childhood trauma has an impact on glucose metabolism and blood composition, which are passed on to the next generation.
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Warm pasta helps hot, angry neutron stars cool down

Live Science - 17 Oct 2020 00:19
Warm pasta helps hot, angry neutron stars cool down Neutron stars are like the most efficient thermoses in the universe, filled with hot noodle soup. Here's how, over the course of millions of years, they cool down.
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Is Sitting Always Bad for Your Mind? Maybe Not

Neuroscience News - 16 Oct 2020 22:54
Is Sitting Always Bad for Your Mind? Maybe Not For older adults, some sedentariness may not be as bad for memory as believed, especially if physical activity benchmarks are being met.
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