Chemistry
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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
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		ChemistryLighting up for uranium
A portable sensor could make it possible to rapidly detect environmental uranium contamination.
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		ChemistryMagnet makeover
A new family of magnets may be a first step toward organic versions of the familiar metal objects.
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		ChemistryFish Killer Caught? Ephemeral Pfiesteria compound surfaces
Scientists claim to have found an elusive algal toxin implicated in massive fish kills along the Mid-Atlantic coast in the 1990s.
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		ChemistrySwitch Hitters: Antibacterial compounds target new mechanism to kill microbes
Recently discovered ribonucleic acid segments, called riboswitches, may become prime targets for new antibacterial drugs.
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		ChemistryFor sweat’s sake
Soldiers and emergency crews may one day find comfort as well as safety in their chemical-protection gear, now that researchers have created a breathable, chemical-blocking composite material.
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		ChemistryHappy fish?
Researchers have detected antidepressant drugs in the brains of fish captured downstream of sewage-treatment plants.
By Janet Raloff - 			
			
		ChemistryTogether and apart
Chemists report the first chemical reaction that can split apart and recombine the two atoms in molecular hydrogen without using an expensive metal catalyst.
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		ChemistryChemical Pop-Up Books
Chemists and engineers have designed two-dimensional structures that self-fold into functional, three-dimensional objects, such as miniature chemistry laboratories and drug-delivery devices.
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		ChemistryWere Viking landers blind to life?
The Viking landers may have missed potential signs of life when they explored Mars in 1976.
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		ChemistryUnnatural success
Chemists report the first synthesis of a promising antibiotic that other researchers recently discovered in nature.
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		ChemistryBack on the Table? Element 118 is served up again
A team of nuclear chemists from the United States and Russia have announced the brief reappearance of element 118.
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		ChemistryPretty in Pictures: Details of molecular machinery gain Nobel
This year's Nobel Prize in Chemistry went to a researcher who determined the structure, in atomic detail, of RNA polymerase taken from yeast cells.