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Science News

Location American Science News for 11 November 2020
(Science China Press) Alkoxyl substitution strategy is proposed to enlarge the interlayer distances and tune the interface environments of β-Ni(OH)2. Operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy studies combined with ex-situ ...
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Taste Aversion Reveals How Bad Experiences Modify Brain and Behavior Learning to avoid certain tastes depends on the long term reduction in activity the connections between threat and taste sensors in the brain.
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Observation of four-charm-quark structure

Phys.org - 11 Nov 2020 22:04
Observation of four-charm-quark structure The strong interaction is one of the fundamental forces of nature, which binds quarks into hadrons such as the proton and the neutron, the building blocks of atoms. According to the quark model, hadrons can be formed by ...
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(Walter and Eliza Hall Institute) The latest animation technology has revealed the molecular detail of how our bodies are protected from cancer by a key 'tumour suppressor' protein called p53.
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(Institute for Basic Science) IBS researchers in South Korea probe the cage formation of the glass at surgical precision and elucidate the onset of glass transition.
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Viking ship in Norway buried near cult temple, feast hall and funeral mounds Archaeologists located the buried Viking ship and ritual center in Norway with ground-penetrating radar.
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Wearing a cloth face mask protects you and others from getting COVID-19, CDC says Cloth face masks offer two-way protection, benefitting both the wearer and those around them.
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Depression Linked to Bowel Conditions

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2020 01:14
Depression Linked to Bowel Conditions Depression may be a new biomarker for the onset of specific bowel conditions, researchers report. The study found those with digestive disorders such as IBS, Crohn's disease, and ulcerative colitis were more likely to be...
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Sleep Loss Hijacks Brain's Activity During Learning

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2020 00:58
Sleep Loss Hijacks Brain's Activity During Learning Sleep deprivation reduces the brain's ability to unlearn fear-related memories, a new study reports.
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Researchers trap electrons to create elusive crystal Like restless children posing for a family portrait, electrons won't hold still long enough to stay in any kind of fixed arrangement.
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Researchers trap electrons to create elusive crystal

Science Daily - 12 Nov 2020 00:31
Now, researchers have developed a way to stack two-dimensional semiconductors and trap electrons in a repeating pattern that forms a specific and long-hypothesized crystal.
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Link Between Sleep Apnea and Increased Risk of Dementia

Neuroscience News - 12 Nov 2020 00:12
Link Between Sleep Apnea and Increased Risk of Dementia Severe obstructive sleep apnea is linked to an increase of the amyloid beta protein, resulting in a greater risk of sufferers developing dementia.
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Rivers of warm air transported across the atmosphere have been found to play a major role in the appearance of vast areas of open water in Antarctic sea ice
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Researchers demonstrate attosecond boost for electron microscopy A team of physicists from the University of Konstanz and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München in Germany have achieved attosecond time resolution in a transmission electron microscope by combining it with a continuou...
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Rare squid with 'elbow' tentacles baffles scientists in spooky new footage Researchers found and measured a group of rare Bigfin Squids congregating off the Australia coast for the first time ever.
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Connecting two classes of unconventional superconductors The understanding of unconventional superconductivity is one of the most challenging and fascinating tasks of solid-state physics. Different classes of unconventional superconductors share that superconductivity emerges ...
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Identifying the microscopic mechanism of vibrational energy harvesters A Japanese research team elucidated the microscopic mechanism in which amorphous silica becomes negatively charged as a vibrational energy harvester, which is anticipated to achieve self-power generation without charging...
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The transformation of a pair: How electrons supertransport current in 'bad metals' To researchers in the field, they are known as 'bad metals,' but they are not really so bad. As a matter of fact, they are the best superconductors because they are able to conduct current with the highest efficiency and...
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This shot of a great white heron and grey heron in their respective treetop nests in Russia was taken by Dmitrii Viliunov using a drone. It won first prize in the wildlife category for the 2020 Drone Photo Awards
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How are sand dunes formed and why do they even exist?

New Scientist - 11 Nov 2020 22:00
The strange, beautiful shapes that sand dunes form are a mystery. Now researchers are conducting huge desert experiments and using dune racetracks to figure it out
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I got rid of my car months ago in an effort to be kinder to the environment, but it has been much harder than I expected and I'm reluctantly driving again, writes Graham Lawton
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Hugs, handshakes and air kisses serve the same crucial purposes as animal greetings like sniffing, eye poking and buttock grabbing
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