Neutrino Detector Finds Elusive Extraterrestrial Particles in 'Major Breakthrough' | Sp... - 0 views
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scientists have pondered the source of cosmic rays, which contain the energy of a rifle bullet in a single atomic nucleus
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It's thought that objects such as supernovas, black holes or gamma ray bursts mayproduce cosmic rays, but their origin is difficult to detect
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Instead, scientists look for neutrinos — subatomic particles with no charge and very little mass — produced when cosmic rays interact with their surroundings
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Desert Farming Experiment Yields First Results | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views
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A project to “green” desert areas with an innovative mix of technologies—producing food, biofuel, clean water, energy, and salt
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A pilot plant built by the Sahara Forest Project (SFP) produced 75 kilograms of vegetables per square meter in three crops annually, comparable to commercial farms in Europe, while consuming only sunlight and seawate
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The heart of the SFP concept is a specially designed greenhouse. At one end, salt water is trickled over a gridlike curtain so that the prevailing wind blows the resulting cool, moist air over the plants inside
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Magma Boils Beneath Antarctic Ice | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views
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Marie Byrd Land is a desolate region of Antarctica buried deep beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
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Historic eruptions have punctured the ice sheet, creating a chain of volcanoes amid the ice
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researchers have shown that molten rock still stirs deep underground
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New Era of Neutrino Astronomy Begins at the South Pole - 0 views
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Astrophysicists have managed to detect and record the mysterious phenomena known as cosmic neutrinos
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nearly massless particles that stream to Earth at the speed of light from outside our solar system, striking the surface in a burst of energy that can be as powerful as a baseball pitcher's fastball
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In this particular study, the researchers observed 28 very high-energy particle events with the use of the IceCube Neutrino Observatory in Antarctica
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Carnegie Mellon computer searches web 24/7 to analyze images and teach itself common sense - 0 views
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NEIL leverages recent advances in computer vision that enable computer programs to identify and label objects in images, to characterize scenes and to recognize attributes, such as colors, lighting and materials, all with a minimum of human supervision
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since late July and already has analyzed three million images, identifying 1,500 types of objects in half a million images and 1,200 types of scenes in hundreds of thousands of images
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sometimes, what NEIL finds can surprise even the researchers
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New research aims to teach computers common sense - 0 views
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Researchers are trying to plant a digital seed for artificial intelligence by letting a massive computer system browse millions of pictures and decide for itself what they all mean
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The system at Carnegie Mellon University is called NEIL, short for Never Ending Image Learning
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In mid-July, it began searching the Internet for images 24/7 and, in tiny steps, is deciding for itself how those images relate to each other
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Mars Rover Curiosity Sidelined by Electrical Glitch | Space.com - 0 views
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(Nov. 17), the mission team noticed a change in the voltage difference between the body of the Curiosity rover and its electricity-distributing power bus
Neutrino Detection Could Help Paint an Entirely New Picture of the Universe - 0 views
MAVEN thunders to Space on Journey to Study Red Planet's Watery History and Potential f... - 0 views
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NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) space probe thundered to space
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Nov. 18
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from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s Space Launch Complex 41 at 1:28 p.m. EST atop a powerful Atlas V rocket
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Celebrating MAVEN's Launch, Planetary Style - 0 views
A New Perspective on Murray Ridge - 0 views
Mars Science Laboratory: Curiosity Out of Safe Mode - 0 views
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received confirmation from Mars
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Nov. 10) that the Curiosity rover has successfully transitioned back into nominal surface operations mode
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had been in safe mode since Nov. 7,
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New research reveals Ming the Mollusk actually 100 years older than thought - 0 views
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it was born in 1499
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the clam was born just a few years after Columbus discovered America
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through the Reformation
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The World's Oldest Animal Is Even Older Than We Thought | Popular Science - 0 views
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Ming, a mollusk of the species Arctica islandica. In 2006, researchers
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examined its interior growth rings--patterns on the inside of its shell--to determine its age
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at an impressive 405 years old
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Why Teenagers Are So Impulsive | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views
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When teenagers successfully resist an urge in a common test of impulsivity, they show increased activation in a brain region associated with restraint
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suggesting that their brains have to work harder to avoid acting on the impulse
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Why do teens—especially adolescent males—commit crimes more frequently than adults
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