Thursday, February 9, 2012

Hydrogen from Acidic Water: Potential Low Cost Alternative to Platinum for Splitting Water

A technique for creating a new molecule that structurally and chemically replicates the active part of the molybdenite catalyst paves the way for developing catalytic materials that can serve ...  > full story
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Ocean Microbe Communities Changing, but Long-Term Environmental Impact Is Unclear

As oceans warm due to climate change, water layers will mix less and affect the microbes and plankton that pump carbon out of the atmosphere – but researchers say it's still unclear ...  > full story
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Gene Therapy Boosts Brain Repair for Demyelinating Diseases

Our bodies are full of tiny superheroes -- antibodies that fight foreign invaders, cells that regenerate, and structures that ensure our systems run smoothly. One such structure is myelin, a material that forms a protective ...  > full story
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How the Zebra Got Its Stripes

Horseflies are unpleasant insects that deliver powerful bites and now it seems that zebras evolved their stripes to avoid attracting the unpleasant pests. New research show that zebras have the least attractive hides for horseflies. ...  > full story
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Amazing Skin Gives Sharks a Push

Shark skin has long been known to improve the fish's swimming performance by reducing drag, but now a new study show that in addition, the skin generates thrust, giving the fish an extra boost. The duo also discovered that Speedo's shark skin-inspired ...  > full story
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Global Sea Level Rise: NASA Mission Takes Stock of Earth's Melting Land Ice

In the first comprehensive satellite study of its kind, researchers have used NASA data to calculate how much Earth's melting land ice is adding to global sea level rise. Using satellite measurements from the NASA/German ...  > full story
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Tiny Primate Is Ultrasonic Communicator

Tarsiers' ultrasonic calls -- among the most extreme in the animal kingdom -- give them a "private channel" of communication, says an anthropologist. ...  > full story
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Memory Strengthened by Stimulating Key Site in Brain

Ever gone to the movies and forgotten where you parked the car? New research may one day help you improve your memory. Neuroscientists have demonstrated that they can strengthen memory in human patients by stimulating a ...  > full story
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January 2012 Fourth Warmest for Contiguous United States, but Alaska Extremely Cold

During January, warmer-than-average conditions enveloped most of the contiguous United States, with widespread below-average precipitation. The overall weather pattern for the ...  > full story
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DNA Sequencing Helps Identify Cancer Cells for Immune System Attack

DNA sequences from tumor cells can be used to direct the immune system to attack cancer, according to scientists. The immune system relies on an intricate network of alarm bells, targets and safety brakes to determine when and what ...  > full story
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Health & Medicine

Chlorhexidine Umbilical Cord Care Can Save Newborn Lives

Cleansing a newborn's umbilical cord with chlorhexidine can reduce an infant's risk of infection and death during the first weeks of life by as much as 20 percent, according to a new study. The study is the latest in a series of studies showing that ...  > full story

Mind & Brain

As Valentine's Day Approaches, Cardiologist Describes Broken Heart Syndrome

People who have been unlucky in love are said to suffer from a "broken heart." A broken heart is an actual medical condition. Broken heart syndrome occurs during highly stressful or emotional times, such as a painful breakup, the death of a spouse ...  > full story

Biological & Earth Sciences


Fossils & Ruins

Charter Service: Encasing the Magna Carta

You often hear about the Framers of the Constitution, but not so much the framers of the Magna Carta. They work for the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Not the authors, of course; they've been dead 700 years. But a NIST ...  > full story

Physical & Applied Sciences


Space & Time

NASA Small Explorer Mission Celebrates 10 Years and 40,000 X-Ray Flares

On February 5, 2002, NASA launched what was then called the High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (HESSI) into orbit. Renamed within months as the Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) after Reuven Ramaty, a deceased NASA scientist ...  > full story

Matter & Energy

Mars-Bound NASA Rover Carries Coin for Camera Checkup

The camera at the end of the robotic arm on NASA's Mars rover Curiosity has its own calibration target, a smartphone-size plaque that looks like an eye chart supplemented with color chips and an attached penny. When Curiosity lands on Mars in ...  > full story

Computers & Math

Hard Drive Breakthrough: New Magnetic Recording Technique Uses Heat to Process Information Much Faster Than Current Technology

Scientists have demonstrated a revolutionary new way of magnetic recording which will allow information to be processed hundreds of times faster than by current hard drive technology. The researchers found they could record information using only ...  > full story

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Cool School - Where Peace Rules

Human development scientists and computer game developers designed a video game that teaches kids how to resolve conflicts peacefully amongst. ...  > full story

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