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| ©Unknown |
| Cluster and racks at Queen Mary, University of London |
Science & Technology
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| ©MatterNews |
| Magnified image of research samples with small holes covered by graphene. One can see light passing through them by the naked eye. |
The defect could cause an increase of around 5 percent that can prove dangerous even for people without diabetes, the researchers reported in the journal Science said on Thursday.
Too much glucose in the blood can damage the eyes, kidneys and nerves, and also lead to heart disease, stroke and limb amputations. It is also a sign of diabetes, though the findings did not link the gene directly to the disease.
This research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Delaware Asteroseismic Research Center.
Called a "pulsating carbon white dwarf," this is the first new class of variable white dwarf star discovered in more than 25 years. Because the overwhelming majority of stars in the universe--including the sun--will end their lives as white dwarfs, studying the pulsations (i.e., variations in light output) of these newly discovered examples gives astronomers a window on an important end point in the lives of most stars.
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| ©NSF |
| Changes in light output over time of the first-discovered pulsating carbon white dwarf star. |
The company has assembled an advisory group of oceanography experts, and in December invited researchers from institutions around the world to the Mountain View, Calif., Googleplex. There, they discussed plans for creating a 3D oceanographic map, according to sources familiar with the matter.
The tool--for now called Google Ocean, the sources say, though that name could change--is expected to be similar to other 3D online mapping applications. People will be able to see the underwater topography, called bathymetry; search for particular spots or attractions; and navigate through the digital environment by zooming and panning. (The tool, however, is not to be confused with the "Google Ocean" project by France-based Magic Instinct Software that uses Google Earth as a visualization tool for marine data.)
A Namibian diamond company, Namdeb, said on Wednesday that it found the wreck during mining operations in the Atlantic.
"The site yielded a wealth of objects including six bronze cannon, several tons of copper, more than 50 elephant tusks, pewter tableware, navigational instruments, weapons and thousands of Spanish and Portuguese gold coins, minted in the late 1400s and early 1500s," said Hilifa Mbako, a company spokesman.
Dieter Noli, an archaeologist, identified the cannon as Spanish, dating from about 1500.
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| ©Reuters |
| The site yielded a wealth of objects including thousands of Spanish and Portuguese gold coins |
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| ©NASA |
| This artistic impression shows what the solar system could have looked like once upon a time. However, how homogenous the solar nebula actually was is debatable. |
A University of Arkansas professor and his colleagues used a combination of microscopy and fractal analysis to examine marks on the teeth of members of an ancient human ancestor species and found that what it actually ate does not correspond with the size and shape of its teeth. This finding suggests that structure alone is not enough to predict dietary preferences and that evolutionary adaptation for eating may have been based on scarcity rather than on an animal's regular diet.











