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376 articles from THURSDAY 19.4.2012
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THURSDAY 19. APRIL, 2012
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A dark, moonless night should offer the best view in years for a sky show known to offer occasional surprises, an astronomer says.
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Dandelion patches in Ottawa and across Eastern Canada have been playing host to hundreds of thousands of butterflies in recent days due to an unusually large spring migration.
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Wildrose Leader Danielle Smith came under fire at the CBC Leaders' Forum for her insistence that the science behind climate change hasn't yet been settled.
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Meeting next week will discuss a range of options
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Step aside, DNA—a new synthetic compound called XNA can not only transmit genetic information but also evolve, a new study says.
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Last week's powerful earthquake off western Indonesia increased pressure on the source of the devastating 2004 tsunami that killed 230,000 people in and around the Indian Ocean, seismologists say.
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In a unusual twist on space science, students in California have launched a rubber chicken to the edge of space to sample a solar storm.
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CHANTILLY, Va. — When space shuttle Discovery began its new mission as a museum relic, it wasn't alone. More than two dozen astronauts helped usher the storied space plane into its new role as a Smithsonian exhibit.
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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is proposing to delist the eastern Steller sea lion, found along the West Coast between Alaska and California, from the Endangered Species List after its biologists found that the species is making the necessary gains in population numbers.
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For the past decade, Estonia has gotten attention for its early adoption and innovative use of Internet technology. Estonians have long used their cellphones to vote, pay utilities and bank, while electronic voting through a national website has been used ...
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Why football players make for good recruits and other facts about these secret protectors, now facing a prostitution scandal.
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A team of four scientists is arguing that cholesterol may slow or stop cancer cell growth. They describe how cholesterol-binding proteins called ORPs may control cell growth.
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A miniature atom-based magnetic sensor has passed an important research milestone by successfully measuring human brain activity. The lightweight sensor potentially could be used for biomedical applications such as studying mental processes and advancing the understanding of neurological diseases.
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Scientists have developed a new monitoring system to analyze and compare emissions from human-made fossil fuels and trace gases in the atmosphere, a technique that likely could be used to monitor the effectiveness of measures regulating greenhouse gases.
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Based on the motions of nearby stars, the invisible substance isn't "where we needed it" to match current theories, a new study says.
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Azinphos-methyl (AZM) has been the most used insecticide in apple production in the United States since the late 1960s, primarily as a control for the codling moth, but a decision by the EPA to phase out AZM by 2012 signals the end of this product's use by tree fruit growers.
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(AP) -- Researchers found substantially more bats in several caves that were the first ones struck by white-nose syndrome, giving them a glimmer of hope amid a scourge that has killed millions of bats in North America.
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"Money, it's a gas," says the sixties rock group Pink Floyd in their song "Money." Indeed, physics professor Victor Yakovenko is an expert in statistical physics and studies how the flow of money and the distribution of incomes in American society resemble the flow of energy between molecules in a gas. In his lectures to be delivered on April 19 at New York University and April 20 at the New School for Social Research, Yakovenko will bring his physics-of-incomes study up to date, including a report on the correlation between levels of income inequality and the appearance of financial downturns, such as the dot-com bubble of 2000 and the more recent housing bubble of 2008.
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A miniature atom-based magnetic sensor developed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has passed an important research milestone by successfully measuring human brain activity. Experiments reported this week verify the sensor's potential for biomedical applications such as studying mental processes and advancing the understanding of neurological diseases.
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A University of Colorado Boulder-led team has developed a new monitoring system to analyze and compare emissions from man-made fossil fuels and trace gases in the atmosphere, a technique that likely could be used to monitor the effectiveness of measures regulating greenhouse gases.
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Using lasers to excite just one atom from a cloud of ultra-cold rubidium gas, physicists have developed a new way to rapidly and efficiently create single photons for potential use in optical quantum information processing and in the study of dynamics and disorder in certain physical systems.
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Officials in Peru said Thursday they are investigating what caused the deaths of nearly 900 dolphins that have washed up on its northern coast over the past four months.
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Los Angeles, CA (April 19, 2012) As presidential candidates from both parties gear up for the big day in November, more and more people are turning to political blogs to provide them with the latest news on the election-front. A new study released in the American Behavioral Scientist (published by SAGE) examined the differences among top political blogs from the right and the left and found that left-wing blogs encourage more user participation, present more opinion-related content, and were more likely to rally their readers to action.
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Russia's environment minister on Thursday blamed Russian-British oil company TNK-BP for causing massive oil pollution in a resource-rich Siberian region and failing to invest in its infrastructure.
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Slovenian adventurer Matevz Lenarcic successfully concluded a 100-day eco-friendly trip around the world on Thursday in an ultra-light plane boasting super-low fuel mileage.
Naposledy aktualizované zdroje
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Guardian Unlimited Science (dnes, 01:05)
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PhysOrg (19. 5, 21:25)
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BBC Science/Nature (19. 5, 19:31)
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Yahoo! (19. 5, 17:13)
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Sci-Tech Today (19. 5, 15:23)
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National Geographic News (19. 5, 14:22)
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EurekAlert (19. 5, 06:00)
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NYT > Science (19. 5, 05:02)
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CBC - Technology & Science News (19. 5, 01:20)
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ScienceDaily (18. 5, 21:37)
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Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories (18. 5, 06:29)
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ScienceNOW (18. 5, 00:23)
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NASA (17. 5, 02:56)
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Discovery (7. 3, 18:11)
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TIME (27. 7, 08:30)

