All Stories
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PhysicsTaming turbulence from afar
New research shows that measurements of smooth fluid motion away from an object can be used to characterize the roiling flow right up next to it.
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Health & MedicineNewly discovered antibodies may boost AIDS vaccine research
Inducing production of these potent HIV neutralizers will pose a challenge.
By Nathan Seppa -
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Health & MedicineFish oil may fight breast cancer
Other popular dietary supplements fail to show protection, a large study shows.
By Nathan Seppa -
SpaceThe incredible shrinking proton
If the subatomic particle really is smaller than thought, a cherished theory may need tweaking.
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EarthAfrica’s bumper crop of dust
Seafloor sediments show that agriculture has greatly boosted airborne dust in the last two centuries.
By Sid Perkins -
PsychologyAncient hominids grabbed early northern exposure
Newly recovered stone tools indicate that hominids lived in chilly northwestern Europe more than 800,000 years ago.
By Bruce Bower -
Health & MedicineProtein regulator shows promise against addiction
Elevating levels of a tiny molecule in rats’ brains blunted the animals’ cocaine use.
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ComputingMachine versus manhole
Computer scientists take on one of New York’s weirder quality-of-life issues: which will be the next to explode?
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LifeOcean acidification may make fish foolhardy
Rising carbon dioxide alters fish larvae’s sense of smell, which they use to avoid predators and find their way home.
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ClimateNew carbon data should produce better climate forecasts
BLOG: More refined measurements for carbon dioxide input by plants and carbon dioxide released during respiration will help models, Science News editor in chief Tom Siegfried reports from the Euroscience Open Forum 2010 in Turin, Italy.