Physics
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We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
- 			 Physics PhysicsThere’s still a lot we don’t know about the protonResearchers are puzzling over the proton's radius, spin and whether it decays. 
- 			 Physics PhysicsThe drama of Albert Einstein’s life unfolds in the new series GeniusScience takes a back seat in National Geographic’s series Genius, which focuses more on politics and Albert Einstein’s love life. 
- 			 Particle Physics Particle PhysicsNew particle probably can’t explain nuclear reactor neutrino mysteryAn antineutrino anomaly seems due to problems with scientists’ predictions, not sterile neutrinos. 
- 			 Chemistry ChemistryNew tech harvests drinking water from (relatively) dry air using only sunlightA prototype device harvests moisture from dry air and separates it into drinkable water using only sunlight. 
- 			 Physics PhysicsPhysics trips up efforts to keep shoelaces tiedLoose laces are due to inertia and force of feet hitting the floor. 
- 			 Health & Medicine Health & MedicineReaders question mental health researchMaintaining mental health, protecting ocean critters and more in reader feedback. 
- 			 Astronomy AstronomyEvent Horizon Telescope to try to capture images of elusive black hole edgeNetwork of radio observatories will attempt a first-ever glimpse at an event horizon. 
- 			 Materials Science Materials ScienceBone-inspired steel cracks less under pressureSteel that’s structured like bone resists cracks better that the traditional form of the heavy-duty building material. 
- 			 Quantum Physics Quantum PhysicsMillions of atoms entangled in record-breaking quantum testsScientists make advance in the quest to take quantum effects to larger scales. 
- 			 Particle Physics Particle PhysicsReaders question supernova physicsStar-destroying neutrinos, heart-hugging robots and more in reader feedback. 
- 			 Particle Physics Particle PhysicsLarge Hadron Collider experiment nabs five new particlesLHCb experiment detects new particles composed of two strange quarks and one charm quark. 
- 			 Physics PhysicsSingle-atom magnets store bits of dataScientists read and write data by harnessing the magnetic properties of holmium atoms.