[Vision2020] Fw:[Spam 5.49] July Issue: Mystery of the Hidden Cosmos
lfalen
lfalen at turbonet.com
Tue Jun 16 16:48:32 PDT 2015
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Subject: [Spam 5.49] July Issue: Mystery of the Hidden Cosmos
From: "Scientific American" <news at email.scientificamerican.com>
To: lfalen at turbonet.com
Date: 06/16/15 20:39:38
Dark matter may be much weirder than physicists have assumedTo view this email as a web page, go here.
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July 2015 Issue Highlights
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Mystery of the Hidden Cosmos
Dark matter may be much weirder than physicists have assumed
Bogdan A. Dobrescu, Don Lincoln
What Doesn't Kill You...
Chemicals that plants make to ward off pests stimulate nerve cells in ways that may protect the brain against diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's
Mark P. MattsonONLINE ONLY:
- Stress Makes Your Brain Stronger: Try Fasting
Life at Hell's Gate
An astonishing discovery is forcing scientists to reconsider whether life can exist in the most extreme places on Earth and in space
Douglas FoxONLINE ONLY:
- Discovery: Fish Live beneath Antarctica
Outshining Silicon
An upstart material—perovskite—could finally make solar cells that are cheaper and more efficient than the prevailing silicon technology
Varun Sivaram, Samuel D. Stranks, Henry J. SnaithONLINE ONLY:
- Tandem Solar Cell May Boost Electricity from Sunlight
>From Wolf to Dog
Scientists are racing to solve the enduring mystery of how a large, dangerous carnivore evolved into our best friend
Virginia MorellONLINE ONLY:
- What Siberian Burials Reveal about the Relationship between Humans and Dogs
The Whole Universe Catalog
Before they die, aging mathematicians are racing to save the Enormous Theorem's proof, all 15,000 pages of it, which divides existence four ways
Stephen Ornes
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