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Monday, July 1, 2013

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News


Cancer is a result of a default cellular 'safe mode,' physicist proposes

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 07:54 PM PDT

With death rates from cancer have remained largely unchanged over the past 60 years, a physicist is trying to shed more light on the disease with a very different theory of its origin that traces cancer back to the dawn of multicellularity more than a billion years ago.

Intergalactic magnifying glasses could help astronomers map galaxy centers

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 07:52 PM PDT

Astronomers may have found a new way to map quasars, the energetic and luminous central regions often found in distant galaxies.

Rocket-launched camera reveals highways and sparkles in the solar atmosphere

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 07:52 PM PDT

Using an innovative new camera on board a sounding rocket, an international team of scientists have captured the sharpest images yet of the Sun's outer atmosphere. The team discovered fast-track 'highways' and intriguing 'sparkles' that may help answer a long-standing solar mystery.

El Nino unusually active in the late 20th century: Is it because of global warming?

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:50 AM PDT

Reliable prediction of El Nino response to global warming is difficult, as El Nino varies naturally over decades and centuries. Instrumental records are too short to determine whether recent changes are natural or attributable to increased greenhouse gases. An international team of scientists now show that recent El Nino activity is the highest for the past 700 years, possibly a response to global warming.

Different neuronal groups govern right-left alternation when walking

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:50 AM PDT

Scientists have identified the neuronal circuits in the spinal cord of mice that control the ability to produce the alternating movements of the legs during walking. The study demonstrates that two genetically-defined groups of nerve cells are in control of limb alternation at different speeds of locomotion, and thus that the animals' gait is disturbed when these cell populations are missing.

Is that bacteria dead yet? Nano and laser technology packed into small device tests antibiotic treatment in minutes

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:50 AM PDT

Researchers have built a matchbox-sized device that can test for the presence of bacteria in a couple of minutes, instead of up to several weeks. This might be a crucial medical tool especially for resistant strains.

The quantum secret to alcohol reactions in space

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:50 AM PDT

Chemists have discovered that an 'impossible' reaction at cold temperatures actually occurs with vigor, which could change our understanding of how alcohols are formed and destroyed in space.

Link between fear and sound perception discovered

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:50 AM PDT

Researchers have discovered in an animal model how fear can increase or decrease the ability to discriminate among sounds depending on context, providing potential new insight into the distorted perceptions of victims of PTSD.

Genomic atlas of gene switches in plants provides roadmap for crop research

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:49 AM PDT

What allows certain plants to survive freezing and thrive in the Canadian climate, while others are sensitive to the slightest drop in temperature? Those that flourish activate specific genes at just the right time -- but the way gene activation is controlled remains poorly understood.

Diamond catalyst shows promise in breaching age-old barrier

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:44 AM PDT

In the world, there are a lot of small molecules people would like to get rid of, or at least convert to something useful. Think carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas most responsible for far-reaching effects on global climate. Nitrogen is another ubiquitous small-molecule gas that can be transformed into the valuable agricultural fertilizer ammonia. Plants perform the chemical reduction of atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia as a matter of course, but for humans to do that in an industrial setting, a necessity for modern agriculture, requires subjecting nitrogen to massive amounts of energy under high pressure. Now a new method may make a big difference.

Liver protein crucial for pregnancy

Posted: 30 Jun 2013 11:44 AM PDT

A protein first shown to function in the liver plays a crucial role in pregnancy in mice and has a key role in the human menstrual cycle, according to researchers.

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