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The Military Alone Will Never Defeat Terrorism

Ahmad Khan Rahami nearly became a household name. Instead, he will likely fade from memory.
The 28-year old naturalized American citizen stands accused of placing four different bombs across New York and New Jersey. One of those devices exploded as intended on September 17, injuring 29 people. Another was placed nearby, possibly intended to injure people fleeing from the first explosion, but it did not go off. Another, discovered earlier that day in Ocean County, New Jersey, near the start of a charity run to benefit the U.S. Marine Corps, misfired, resulting in no injuries, but triggered memories of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing that killed three people and wounded 280. A fourth device was found in Elizabeth, New Jersey, near a train station and a busy pub.
To say that America got lucky is an understatement.
The Boston Marathon bombers used two bombs, and when the carnage was done the killers were still on the loose and able to kill again -- which they did three days later when they shot MIT police officer Sean Collier, kicking off events that led to the lockdown of parts of the Boston area while police hunted for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
Rahami had four devices, in four locations. The police have questioned why Rahami picked the targets he did. Aside from perhaps the road race, none had symbolic significance, nor were the bombs particularly well positioned to cause mass casualties.
“We don’t understand the target or the significance of it,” a police officer told The New York Times.
“It’s by a pile of Dumpsters on a random sidewalk.”
During the shootout after which he was detained, he shot two police officers, neither of whom was seriously injured. So far the investigation appears to indicate that Rahami operated alone.
In other words, things could have been much worse.
For all practical purposes, Rahami’s failures appear to be his own, not the result of law enforcement foiling his plots. He successfully placed the bombs without getting caught, but they were largely ineffective. The police apprehended him because he was sleeping in a doorway, in the open. He engaged in a shootout with police, but he was not in a fortified position when doing so, nor was he equipped with anything more powerful than a Glock 9mm handgun.
The scary reality is that Rahami may not have been a very effective terrorist. He may not have been connected with a wider terrorist network. He may not have been fully committed to his cause. We still don’t know all the details, but we do know that Rahami is a test case for what law enforcement and counterterrorism officials fear the most.
How do you stop someone like Rahami?
Perhaps the most important answer is learning how someone like this starts down the road that leads them to terrorism in the first place.
According to a New York Times investigation into Rahami’s life, here is what we know about him so far: He was born in Afghanistan in 1988 and he moved to the United States with his family at the age of 12 or 13. In 2005, he traveled to Karachi, Pakistan. Friends back home in New Jersey considered him to be a normal, Westernized young man, though there were clearly some problems -- namely struggles with his immigrant father and the fathering of a daughter with his high school girlfriend. According to those who knew him, his attitudes and behavior changed significantly after spending three months in Pakistan in 2011 and nearly a year in Quetta, near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, in 2014.
Upon his return, Rahami’s friends said that he was noticeably different -- more stern, more distant.
“He grew a beard and exchanged his typical wardrobe of T-shirts and sweatpants for traditional Muslim garb. He began to pray in the back of the store,” the Times reported.
Unbeknown to them, their friend had gotten married in Pakistan. Representative Albio Sires, a New Jersey Democrat, said Mr. Rahami had contacted his office in 2014 for help bringing his pregnant wife over from Pakistan. The matter was complicated by the fact that the United States Embassy in Islamabad told her that she needed to wait until her baby was born for both of them to come, said Mr. Sires, who added that he did not know whether they eventually did.
The Guardian reports that Rahami spent those three weeks in Pakistan in 2011 at the Kaan Kuwa Naqshbandi madrasah, a religious school with ties to the Afghan Taliban. Rahami’s father offers a slightly different story, saying that his son traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2013 and came back a changed person, which is why he informed the FBI that he was concerned that his son might have become a terrorist.
Mohammed Rahami (third from left), the father of Ahmad Khan Rahami, talks with FBI investigators in Elizabeth, New Jersey.
Mohammed Rahami (third from left), the father of Ahmad Khan Rahami, talks with FBI investigators in Elizabeth, New Jersey.
The FBI conducted an “assessment” of Rahami, his father recanted his statements, and the investigation never led to any formal charges, nor was Rahami ever placed on the terrorist watch list. This matches a separate investigation by The New York Times that found 2013 to be the year of Rahami’s radical transformation from class clown to, ultimately, an accused terrorist.
The investigation into Rahimi’s activity and overseas connections are ongoing, but clues from his writing give us insight into some of his thinking.
When Rahami was taken into custody after being shot, police found a journal, penetrated by their bullets and soaked with his blood. Through the crimson filter, Rahami praises “Sheikh Amwar,” presumably a reference to Amwar al-Awlaki, the famous American cleric who started his ministry by preaching peace but who became one of militant Islamism’s most effective preachers. Nidal Hasan, the Fort Hood shooter who was an apostle of Awlaki’s, also gets a mention. Rahami’s journal speaks about how “Brother Osama bin Laden, offered you truce,” likely referring to an address made by the Al-Qaeda founder about how his terrorist organization would keep killing Westerners until all foreign powers pulled out of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Rahami writes: “You continue your slaughter against mujahedin be it in Afghanistan, Iraq, Sham, Palestine..." but the rest of the sentence cannot be read through the damage to the journal.
The journal refers to “Brother Adnani,” Abu Muhammad al-Adnani al-Shami, the spokesman for the extremist group Islamic State (IS) and one of its most important leaders. Rahami mentioned the “Dawla” -- the State -- and his desire to travel to Sham, or greater Syria. Short of that, Rahami wrote the words “attack the kuffar (non-believers) in their backyard," which appears to be exactly what Rahami tried to do.
Certainly, many people in the intelligence community are asking how Rahami slipped through the net. Surely, traveling to areas of Pakistan known for fostering militants, attending a pro-Taliban madrasah, and having a complaint filed to the FBI by one’s father should have put Rahami on the radar screen. Still, traveling to the Middle East is common, and the Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, TIDE, more commonly known as the terrorist watch list, had 1.1 million names on it in 2013.
Terrorists will slip through the cracks.
Ultimately, the most effective method for stopping terrorists is perhaps to ensure that they never become terrorists in the first place by eliminating the conditions that breed violence and by destroying terrorist leaders who inspire or train others. The problem with this should be obvious for anyone looking at Rahami’s journal, however.
Bin Laden, Awlaki, Adnani -- these men have already been killed by U.S. antiterrorism efforts. Nidal Hasan is in prison awaiting execution. The “Dawla” in “Sham” is slowly but steadily collapsing militarily, under heavy attack by the U.S. military, a coalition from across the region and the world, Kurdish ground troops, the Iraqi military, and now a Turkish ground offensive.
Rahami is a reminder that while the military defeat of terrorism organizations is important, jihad cannot be defeated by bombs alone.

Emergency meetings held in Seoul after Donald Trump wins U.S. presidency

A North Korean soldier stands guard at the joint security area of Panmunjom in South Korea. Seoul held emergency meetings immediately after the U.S. presidential election. File Photo by Keizo Mori/UPI 
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SEOUL, Nov. 9 (UPI) -- Republican President-elect Donald Trump's victory caused panic in South Korea's financial markets and prompted Seoul's national security council to hold an emergency meeting.
During the briefing on Wednesday, South Korean President Park Geun-hye asked the council to "closely monitor developing relations with the [incoming] Trump administration," local news network TV Chosun reported.
But after election results were announced, Park also sent a congratulatory message to Trump, citing his win and his experience in "outstanding" achievements, according to Yonhap.
Park said in her message she looks forward to strengthening cooperation between the two countries in order to resolve longstanding North Korea issues and to further develop the U.S.-South Korea alliance.
As South Korea's main stock index the KOSPI shed more than 2 percentage points and the local currency depreciated in value, Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn called for an emergency meeting of ministers, pledging to work with the U.S. president-elect on bilateral issues.
Both Park and Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se called for continuity in U.S. North Korea policy. Park asked her aides to work toward strengthening U.S.-South Korea pressure on North Korea, so "the next U.S. administration without hesitation" continues current policy.
South Korea's opposition party presidential hopeful also congratulated Trump on his victory, No Cut News reported. Moon Jae-in said in his message Trump's win shows the "desire of the American people for change in the future."
U.S. Ambassador to Seoul Mark Lippert said the election outcome does not change the bilateral alliance.
In the course of his campaign Trump had suggested China take more responsibility for North Korea and said he is open to Japan and South Korea developing their own nuclear defense.
"Over the 60 years, we have had this special alliance. It's been through ups and downs. [But] it will always get stronger. I am confident that that trajectory will continue," Lippert said Wednesday.

Russia: Dutch sub tried to approach, spy on aircraft carrier

The Admiral Kuznetsov, a Russian aircraft carrier, was in the Mediterranean Sea, when a Dutch submarine Wednesday tried to approach the carrier group and spy on it, a Russian Defense Ministry spokesman said. Photo courtesy the Russian Ministry of Defense.
MOSCOW, Nov. 9 (UPI) -- A Dutch submarine attempted to spy on a Russian aircraft carrier after approaching it in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, a Russian Defense Ministry spokesman said Wednesday.
The Northern Fleet's anti-submarine ships forced the sub to leave the area near Russia's Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier, spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said in a statement.
"The clumsy attempts to carry out dangerous maneuvers in the direct proximity of the Russian group of warships could have led to grave navigation consequences," he said.
He said two anti-submarine ships, Severomorsk and the Vice-Admiral Kulakov, at 6:50 a.m. spotted a Dutch navy sub, which neared the Northern Fleet's aircraft carrier group for surveillance purposes."
He said the crews "easily identified the submarine that was 20 kilometers [12.5 miles] away using the standard onboard hydroacoustics systems and data obtained from anti-submarine helicopters Ka-27 PL. Despite the submarine's attempts to evade surveillance, a stable hydroacoustic contact was established with it."
Konashenkov said they monitored the submarine for more than an hour and forced it to leave the carrier group.
"It is noteworthy that submarines of such class, having big displacement, are not fit for reconnaissance," the spokesman said.
The ministry official also said the Russian navy's aircraft carrier group regularly spotted NATO's submarines on its way to the Mediterranean.
Earlier this month, he said the USS Virginia was trying to spy on Russian vessels.
Last month, Russia's Northern Fleet's the Kuznetsov aircraft carrier, accompanied by the Pyotr Veliky battle cruiser, the Severomorsk and Kulakov, and support vessel were sent to the Mediterranean to hold drills and strengthen capabilities.

Donald Trump to be nation's 45th president; Hillary Clinton concedes

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President-elect of the United States Donald Trump arrives with his family to make his acceptance speech at the New York Hilton Midtown on November 8, 2016 in New York City. Trump stunned the political world by defeating Hillary Clinton. Photo by John Angelillo/UPI 
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NEW YORK, Nov. 9 (UPI) -- Republican Donald Trump on Tuesday completed one of the most improbable campaigns in American history, going from business mogul and tabloid sensation to a reality television star -- and now the 45th president of the United States.
His stunning victory deals a searing blow to Democrats, who hoped eight years after sending the first black man to the Oval Office they would break through the highest glass ceiling for women. In the end, Clinton, a candidate with three decades of experience in public service, was dogged by political scandals past and present that overshadowed her potentially historic White House bid.
Trump, having concluded one of the most divisive campaigns in U.S. history, spoke in the wee hours of Wednesday, promising to unite a country after a closely fought race and "bind the wounds of division."
"It is time for us to come together as one united people. It's time. I pledge to every citizen of our land that I will be president for all Americans and this is so important to me. For those who have chosen not to support me in the past, of which there were a few people, I'm reaching out for your help so we can unify and bring together our great country," he said.
Trump was gracious speaking of Clinton.
"She congratulated us -- it's about us -- on our victory and I congratulated her and her family on a very, very, very hard fought campaign. Hillary has worked very long and very hard over a long period of time and we owe her a major debt of gratitude for her service to our country. I mean that very sincerely," he said.
By the UPI/CVoter projections, Trump won at least 284 votes in the Electoral College, with some state races still too close to call. Candidates need 270 to win.
Trump's campaign roused a sleeping giant in American politics: working-class white people, a group that powered the Reagan revolution in the 1980s, but had failed to produce a popular majority in five of the last six elections. Trump's aggressive, unapologetic rhetoric about a nation suddenly devoid of its prior greatness offended millions, but served as a call to arms for millions more.
His policy prescriptions also ignored political norms for a national campaign, channeling the anger of Internet message boards and conservative talk radio into a set of proposals that, if enacted, would permanently change the face of the nation and its relationship to the world. He has proposed building a wall on the Mexican border and promised he will force the Mexican government to pay for it. He assured voters the mass deportation of undocumented immigrants will begin immediately after he is sworn in. He has promised to rip up free trade deals and set fire to an international climate pact negotiated by his predecessor Barack Obama and 200 other nations. He has hinted American military alliances will be subject to allies paying for U.S. protection.
His campaign drew crowds more in line with a rock concert or a football game, and were frequently just as rowdy. Chants of "lock her up!" referencing Clinton's private email server scandal, were as frequent as "USA! USA! USA!" The rallies occasionally turned violent, when supporters physically accosted protesters, with Trump as emcee sometimes egging them on.
Trump ascends to the presidency after running one of the most unconventional campaigns in the nation's history. He began the race by calling Mexicans "rapists" and "murderers." He repeatedly brawled with his Republican primary opponents including a string of debates each nastier than the last.
He referred to his opponents not with their political honorifics senator, governor or secretary, but with schoolyard taunts: "Little" Marco Rubio, "Lyin'" Ted Cruz, "Low Energy" Jeb Bush, "Crooked" Hillary Clinton.
And that was only the policy end of a campaign that was defined just as often by public feuds the candidate engaged in with ordinary Americans.
He publicly criticized a Muslim Gold Star family that lost a son in Iraq after they criticized his proposal to halt virtually all Muslim immigration. He ridiculed a former Miss Universe as fat after she became a topic of discussion at the first presidential debate.
Even a month ago, Trump's hopes for the presidency seemed all but lost, after a tape of him speaking into a hot microphone for Access Hollywood in 2005 captured vulgar comments, as he boasted his celebrity status empowered him to kiss and grope women without their consent.
After the tape, a dozen women came forward, each telling a similar story of Trump kissing or groping them against their will – and Trump responded by calling the women liars who were out for attention. Some he said were not pretty enough to warrant his attention.
In electing Trump, millions of Americans voted for a candidate about whose personal finances – and vast business empire – they know less than any major party nominee in the last 40 years. Trump steadfastly refused to open his tax returns to public scrutiny, citing an ongoing audit by the Internal Revenue Service. The New York Times published one year of his taxes, 1996, which showed Trump took a loss of nearly $1 billion, which he later acknowledged he has used to offset taxes on his personal income for more than 18 years.

Supermoon 2016

November’s Supermoon 2016 – Closest of a Lifetime?

by David Dickinson
What's that, rising in the sky?
By now, you've heard the news. We'll spare you the "it's a bird, it's a plane..." routine to usher in the Supermoon 2016. This month's Full Moon is not only the closest for the year, but the nearest Full Moon for a 80 year plus span.
Like Blue and Black Moons, a Supermoon is more of a cultural phenomenon than a true astronomical event. The Moon's orbit is elliptical, taking it from 362,600 to 405,400 km from the Earth in the course of its 27.55 day anomalistic orbit from one perigee to the next. For the purposes of this week's discussion, we consider a Supermoon as when the Full Moon occurs within 24 hours of perigee, and a Minimoon as when the Full Moon occurs within 24 hours of apogee. From the Earth, the Moon varies in apparent size from 29.3” to 34.1” across. This month, thee Moon reaches perigee on November 14that 356,511 kilometers distant, 2 hours and 22 minutes before Full.
A perigee 'Supermoon' versus an apogee 'Minimoon'. Image credit and copyright: Raven Yu.
A perigee 'Supermoon' versus an apogee 'Minimoon'. Image credit and copyright: Raven Yu.
This is the closest perigee Moon for 2016, beating out the April 7th, 2016 perigee Moon by just 652 kilometers. Perigee can vary over a span of 2,800 kilometers. In the 21stcentury, the farthest lunar perigee (think the 'most distant near point') occurs on January 3rd, 2100 at 370,356 kilometers distant, while the closest perigee of the century (356,425 kilometers) occurs on December 6th , 2052.
When the Moon reaches Full on November 14th at 13:51 UT, it's just 356,520 kilometers distant, (that is , as measured from the Earth's center) the closest Full Moon since January 26th, 1948 (356,490 km) and until November 25th , 2034 (356,446 km) losing out to either dates by just 21 kilometers.
Why does perigee vary? Well, as the Moon orbits the Earth, the Sun tugs our large natural satellite's orbit around as well, in an 8.85 year cycle known as the precession of the line of apsides. Earth's orbit is elliptical as well, and the tugging of the Sun (and to a much lesser degree, the other planets in the solar system) alters the perigee and apogee points slightly based on where the Earth-Moon pair fall in their swing about a common barycenter.
The November Full Moon is also known as the Full Beaver Moon by the Algonquin Native Americans, a good time to ensure a supply of winter furs before the swamps froze over. A good sign that even in 2016, 'Winter is Coming.'
Does the Moon look any larger to you than usual as it rises to the east opposite to the setting Sun on Monday night? When the Moon reaches Full, it passes the zenith as seen from the central Indian Ocean region just south of Sri Lanka, 354,416 km distant. Of course, as the Moon rises, it's actually one full Earth radii more distant than when straight overhead at the zenith.
A side-by-side 'Super' vs 'Minimoon.' Image credit and copyright: Marco Langbroek.
A side-by-side 'Super' vs 'Minimoon.' Image credit and copyright: Marco Langbroek.
Would you notice any difference in the size of the November Full Moon, if you didn't know better? The 4' odd difference between an apogee and perigee Full Moon is certainly discernible in side-by-side images... but it's interesting to note that early cultures did not uncover the elliptical nature of the Moon's motion, though it certainly would have been possible. Crystalline spheres ruled the day, a sort of perfection that was just tough to break in the minds of many.
Be sure to enjoy the rising Full Moon on Monday night, the largest for many years to come.

Medical-Science News-

Medical News


Targeting Pathogenic Bacteria
During the AVS 63rd International Symposium and Exhibition being held November 6-11, 2016, in Nashville, Tennessee, Stephane Evoy, an applied physicist from the University of Alberta, will explain how the team recognized the limited reliability of an...
– AVS: Science Array Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
AVS 63rd International Symposium and Exhibition
Embargo expired on 09-Nov-2016 at 09:00 ET


Mismatched Light and Heat Levels Can Disrupt Body Clock
Body clock function can break down when light and temperature levels throughout the day are out of sync, finds new UCL research in fruit flies.
– University College London
Cell Reports
Embargo expired on 08-Nov-2016 at 12:00 ET


McMaster Scientists Discover Autism Gene Slows Down Brain Cell Communication
The researchers discovered an important ‘on’ button in DIXDC1 protein that instructs brain cells to form mature connections called synapses with other brain cells during development.
– McMaster University
Embargo expired on 08-Nov-2016 at 12:00 ET


Penn Medicine Endocrinologist Named President-Elect of the Endocrine Society
Susan J. Mandel, MD, MPH, director of Clinical Endocrinology and Diabetes for the University of Pennsylvania Health System, and a professor in the division of Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism in Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine, has been el...
– Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
Embargo expired on 09-Nov-2016 at 09:00 ET


Experimental Drug Delivers One-Two Punch to Prostate Cancer Cells
An experimental drug that targets abnormally high levels of a protein linked to cancer growth appears to significantly reduce the proliferation of prostate cancer cells in laboratory cell cultures and animals, while also making these cells considerab...
– Johns Hopkins Medicine
Cancer Research


NYU Meyers Nursing Research Identifies Predictors of Depression Among Women with Diabetes
Research shows adults with diabetes are disproportionately prone to depression and the risk to be significantly greater for women than it is for men. A NYU study establishes various depression predictors among adult women of diverse ages, races, and...
– New York University
The Diabetes Educator


Social Networking by Doctors May Save Patients’ Lives, Study Suggests
A new study finds that heart surgery patients’ chances of survival depends in part on the overall previous level of teamwork among all the physicians who cared for them across their surgery preparation, operation, hospitalization and recuperation.
– University of Michigan Health System
Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, DOI: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.116.002714 HS020927


Television Cooking Shows Overlook Safe Food Handling Practices
Television cooking shows are an important resource for home cooks, but if these shows fail to model recommended food safety measures, it may lead to poor practices among consumers. Therefore, researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst d...
– Society for Nutrition Education and Behavior
Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior


Lab-Grown Mini Lungs Successfully Transplanted Into Mice
Scientists can now grow 3-D models of lungs from stem cells, creating new ways to study respiratory diseases.
– University of Michigan Health System
eLife


First Cellular Atlas of DNA-Binding Molecule Could Advance Precision Therapies
Biochemists at the University of Wisconsin–Madison have created the first atlas that maps where molecular tools that can switch genes on and off will bind to the human genome. It is a development they say could enable these tools to be targeted to ...
– University of Wisconsin-Madison
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Nov 7 2016


NYU Researchers Examine the Influence of Country-Level and Health System Factors on Nursing and Physician Personnel Production
A key component to achieving good patient outcomes in the healthcare world is having the right number and type of healthcare professionals with the right resources. This is still a large problem for many countries throughout the world. A recent NYU ...
– New York University


Quality Improvement Funding Available for Health Care Providers in Ohio
/PRNewswire/ -- Medical Advantage Group is offering qualified Ohio practices grant funding for practice transformation and quality reporting necessary for optimum reimbursement under the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA). ...
– Medical Advantage Group


How Brain Surgery Eliminates Seizures in Epilepsy Patients
Surgery is an option for patients who do not respond to medications and have epileptic scar tissue that can be removed safely. In 60 to 70 percent of surgery patients, seizures are completely eliminated, and the success rate likely will improve as im...
– Loyola University Health System


Dermatologists Share Skin Care Tips for Men
When it comes to skin care, men have traditionally kept it simple. However, experts say more men are now pursuing healthier, younger-looking skin. Since November is National Healthy Skin Month, dermatologists from the American Academy of Dermatology...
– American Academy of Dermatology


The Endocrine Society Elects Five Members to Its Governing Council
Members of the Endocrine Society have elected five new Officers and Council members to lead the world’s oldest and largest global membership organization representing endocrinologists, who are dedicated to research on hormones and the clinical prac...
– Endocrine Society


Case-Coulter Translational Research Partnership Awards $1 Million for Promising University-Based Biomedical Engineering Technologies
The Case-Coulter Translational Research Partnership (CCTRP) announced more than $1 million in funding and support for the 2016 cycle. Four Case Western Reserve University projects were selected for full program funding. Projects range from diagnostic...
– Case Western Reserve University


Seattle Cancer Care Alliance and Hawaii Pacific Health Announce Partnership to Expand Access for Patients in Hawaii
Hawaii Pacific Health has joined the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance Affiliate Network. SCCA has 13 Affiliate Network partners located across the Western U.S., including in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and now Hawaii.
– Seattle Cancer Care Alliance

Science News


Aircraft Topcoat Degradation
During the AVS 63rd International Symposium and Exhibition being held November 6-11, 2016 ,in Nashville, Tennessee, Taraneh Bozorgzad Moghim and a team of researchers from the University of Surrey in the U.K. studied how the high-performance organic ...
– AVS: Science Array Technology of Materials, Interfaces, and Processing
AVS 63rd International Symposium and Exhibition
Embargo expired on 09-Nov-2016 at 09:00 ET


Now You See It, Now You Don’t
A University of Utah electrical and computer engineering associate professor Rajesh Menon and his team have developed a cloaking device for microscopic photonics integrated devices in an effort to make future processing chips smaller, faster and cons...
– University of Utah
Embargo expired on 09-Nov-2016 at 05:00 ET


Evolution Purged Many Neanderthal Genes From Human Genome
Larger populations allowed humans to shed weakly deleterious gene variants that were widespread in Neanderthals.
– PLOS
PLOS Genetics 12(11): e1006340
Embargo expired on 08-Nov-2016 at 14:00 ET


Study: Carbon-Hungry Plants Impede Growth Rate of Atmospheric CO2 
New findings suggest the rate at which CO2 is accumulating in the atmosphere has plateaued in recent years because Earth’s vegetation is grabbing more carbon from the air than in previous decades.
– Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Embargo expired on 08-Nov-2016 at 11:00 ET


How Land Use Change Affects Water Quality, Tracing the Ivory Trail, How Severe Wildfires Make Forests Susceptible To Bark Beetle Outbreaks, and More in the Environmental Science News Source
The latest research on the environment in the Environmental Science News Source
– Newswise


Studying Structure to Understand Function Within ‘Material Families’
Carbon, silicon, germanium, tin and lead are all part of a family that share the same structure of their outermost electrons, yet range from acting as insulators to semiconductors to metals. Is it possible to understand these and other trends within...
– American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Collective excitations and viscosity in in liquid BiThe Journal of Chemical Physics


Greenland Fossils Reveal Global Ecosystem Recovery After Mass Extinction
A new study published in Scientific Reports shows how higher latitude ecosystems recovered after the World's most cataclysmic extinction event 252 million years ago.
– Uppsala University
Scientific Reports


Shedding Light on the Formation of Nanodroplets in Aqueous Solutions of Polar Organics
Researchers have shed new light on the heterogeneous nature of a polar organic liquid mixed with water. They used laser light as a tool that allowed them to demonstrate the existence of stable nanodroplets of tetrahydrofuran in the bulk of aqueous el...
– American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Droplet-like heterogeneity of aqueous tetrahydrofuran solutions at the submicrometer scaleThe Journal of Chemical Physics


PPPL Physicists Build Diagnostic That Measures Plasma Velocity in Real Time
Physicists at PPPL have developed a diagnostic that provides crucial real-time information about the ultrahot plasma swirling within doughnut-shaped fusion machines known as tokamaks.
– Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
DE-AC02-09CH11466


IBO Matthews Elected Fellow of Optical Society
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory physicist Manyalibo (Ibo) Matthews has been elected as a fellow of the Optical Society for his “outstanding contributions and sustained leadership in the field of high power laser-induced damage science, laser...
– Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory


Nuclear Reactor Workshop Spotlights Collaboration, Progress
Renewed interest in molten salt technology was evident at a recent gathering of advanced nuclear reactor experts at the US Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). Nearly 200 attendees from national labs, industry, ut...
– Oak Ridge National Laboratory


Internship Program Helps Foster Development of Future Nuclear Scientists
For a second straight summer, Rachel Seibert spent her days at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) researching advanced nuclear reactors. The Ph.D. candidate may not have had such an opportunity more than a decade ago, b...
– Oak Ridge National Laboratory


LLNL Wins Three R&D 100 Awards
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory researchers have garnered three awards among the top 100 industrial inventions worldwide.
– Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory


Brookhaven Lab Wins Three 2016 R&D 100 Awards
Innovations in microscopy, catalysis, and nanomaterials are among the 100 technologies and services of the past year selected by R&D Magazine to receive awards.
– Brookhaven National Laboratory


University of Arkansas Leads Effort to Nurture Research Collaborations in Southeast Asia
The University of Arkansas is helping lead an effort to develop a bioscience network of scientists in the United States and Southeast Asia.
– University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
1624171


Accelerating Talent: Perimeter Institute Partners with South American Institute for Fundamental Research
Perimeter Institute and the South American Institute for Fundamental Research celebrate a new partnership that will support research, training, and educational outreach.
– Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics


Argonne Researchers Win Three 2016 R&D 100 Awards
Innovative technologies developed by researchers at Argonne and their partners earned three R&D 100 Awards on Thursday, November 3.
– Argonne National Laboratory


Brookhaven Lab's Robert McGraw Receives AS&T's Outstanding Publication Award from the American Association for Aerosol Research
The award recognizes the novel method he developed nearly 20 years ago to mathematically characterize how the distribution of tiny atmospheric particles called aerosols evolves over time.
– Brookhaven National Laboratory

Lifestyle & Social Sciences


Trump’s Political Success Was a Triumph of Style Over Substance
Style, not substance, accounts for Donald Trump’s U.S. Republican presidential nomination, according to a psychological analysis from the University of British Columbia.
– University of Bristol
Personality and Individual Differences.


Play Weaves Fairy Tales Into Darkly Beautiful Story at UIC
The UIC School of Theatre and Music is presenting “The Secret in the Wings,” a play from Tony Award winner Mary Zimmerman. The play is directed by UIC School of Theatre and Music director and Lookingglass ensemble member Christine Mary Dunford.
– University of Illinois at Chicago

Business News


Election 2016: Why Investors Might Benefit No Matter Who Wins
When the U.S. experiences three simultaneous conditions—a major macroeconomic news day, a Democrat President in office, and pre-election day—the U.S. stock market surges an average of 17 basis points, according to a new study.
– University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business


Babson College Hosts 2016 Entrepreneurship Forum
The Babson Entrepreneurship Forum 2016 will take place November 11, 2016 at the Babson College Wellesley campus. Every year, students, faculty, professionals and entrepreneurs from the Boston community gather for this one-day conference to learn and ...
– Babson College

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