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Dead or Alive, Schrödinger's Cat Can Be in 2 Boxes at Once Read More » Can Stomach Botox Injections Help People Lose Weight? Doctors are considering a new use for Botox: The drug may help obese people lose weight, according to early research. In addition, researchers in earlier studies assumed that Botox, which relaxes muscles, would help people lose weight because it would slow down the rate that the stomach empties itself. Read More »Vaping Could Make Medical Pot Healthier A new type of smoking called "cannavaping" — using e-cigarettes for vaping cannabis — may help people use marijuana for medical reasons, according to a small, early study. Smoking conventional marijuana cigarettes may lead a person to inhale high amounts of the toxic contaminants that are released when marijuana is burned, the researchers said. In contrast, cannavaping might provide a way to avoid inhaling high levels of these contaminants, the researchers said. Read More »Rosetta spacecraft finds key building blocks for life in a comet By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - Scientists for the first time have directly detected key organic compounds in a comet, bolstering the notion that these celestial objects delivered such chemical building blocks for life long ago to Earth and throughout the solar system. The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft made several detections of the amino acid glycine, used by living organisms to make proteins, in the cloud of gas and dust surrounding Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, scientists said on Friday. Glycine previously was indirectly detected in samples returned to Earth in 2006 from another comet, Wild 2. Read More » | ||||
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Friday, May 27, 2016
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Thursday, May 26, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Enigmatic French cave structures show off Neanderthal skills Read More » Biotech Regeneron replaces Intel as sponsor of Science Talent Search By Ransdell Pierson NEW YORK (Reuters) - Biotechnology company Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc on Thursday became the title sponsor of the most prestigious U.S. science competition for high school students, taking the baton from chipmaker Intel Corp. Regeneron pledged $100 million to support the Science Talent Search and related programs through 2026, and doubled awards for the top 300 scientists and their schools, to $2,000 each. Regeneron's two top executives competed in the annual event during the 1970s and went on to build one of the world's biggest biotech companies, with cutting-edge drugs for fighting macular degeneration, cancer and cholesterol. The fast-growing biotech company will take over as named sponsor from Intel, whose chips were helping build the personal computer industry in 1998 when it took over as sponsor from Westinghouse. Read More »From hardy pigs to super-crops, gene editing poses new EU dilemma Read More » Missing for 72 Years: WWII Aircraft Finally Located in Pacific Read More » Blazing-Fast Hypersonic Jet on Track for 2018 Launch Read More » These 7 Foods Cause the Most Pet Deaths In a new review of studies, two animal health researchers in Italy drew up a list of the foods that are the most common culprits in pet poisonings worldwide. "Several foods that are perfectly suitable for human consumption can be toxic to dogs and cats," the researchers wrote in their review, published in the journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science. Sometimes, owners give these harmful foods to their dogs and cats, but a lot of times, pets accidentally ingest these foods, which happen to be commonplace in homes. Read More »Woman Sprouts Thousands of Tiny Moles, and Doctors Aren't Sure Why Indeed, the sheer number of moles was "unprecedented," said Dr. Hensin Tsao, a dermatologist who treated the woman and the senior author of the case report. Although an explosion of moles — called eruptive nevi — is uncommon, it's not unheard of, Tsao told Live Science. Read More »Expandable space habitat fails to inflate in NASA's first test Read More » Gluten-Free Diets Are Not Necessarily Healthier, Doctors Warn Some kids are following a gluten-free diet even though they do not have a medical condition that requires avoiding gluten, and this is worrying some doctors. In fact, they can be higher in calories, and may not be enriched with vitamins and minerals that are important for children, said study co-author Dr. Eyad Almallouhi, a pediatric gastroenterologist at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. "Many people think that a gluten-free diet is healthier than the usual diet, which is not always true," said Almallouhi, who presented the findings here Sunday (May 22) at Digestive Disease Week, a scientific meeting focused on digestive diseases. Read More »Scientists: Underground stone rings made by Neanderthals Read More » Why Some Flies Have Mega Sperm Read More » School-Bus-Size Giant Squid May Be Lurking Deep in the Sea Read More » Brightest laser blows up water in cinematic and scientific first Scientists have recorded the first ever microscopic movies of water being vaporized by the world's brightest X-ray laser. As each individual X-ray pulse hit the water, a single image was recorded, timed from five billionths of a second to one ten-thousandth of a second after the pulse. Read More »Radar images reveal Mars is coming out of an ice age Read More » | ||||
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Wednesday, May 25, 2016
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Physicist Kip Thorne Talks Black Holes at the Genius Gala Awards Read More » Light Behaving Badly: Strange Beams Reveal Hitch in Quantum Mechanics A hidden property of corkscrew, spiraled beams of light could put a hitch in quantum mechanics. The photons, or light particles, inside these light-based Möbius strips spin with a momentum previously thought to be impossible. The findings could shake up some of the assumptions in quantum mechanics, the rules that govern the menagerie of tiny subatomic particles. Read More »Confirmed: The Soil Under Your Feet Is Teeming with Life Read More » Scientists: Underground stone rings made by Neanderthals BERLIN (AP) — Two mysterious stone rings found deep inside a French cave were probably built by Neanderthals about 176,500 years ago, proving that the ancient cousins of humans were capable of more complex behavior than previously thought, scientists say. Read More »Swallow This Robot: Foldable Droid Could Mend Stomachs Read More » | ||||
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