środa, 29 czerwca 2016

Fwd: Science Times: NASA's New Visitor to Jupiter, Anxious Dogs and Contagious Cancer

HOT!
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: NYTimes.com <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
Date: Tue, Jun 28, 2016 at 1:45 PM
Subject: Science Times: NASA's New Visitor to Jupiter, Anxious Dogs and Contagious Cancer
To: pascal.alter@gmail.com



View in Browser | Add nytdirect@nytimes.com to your address book.

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

The New York Times

NYTimes.com/Science »

The New York Times

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

A 35-minute engine burn will slow down the Juno probe and allow it to be captured by Jupiter's gravity.
A 35-minute engine burn will slow down the Juno probe and allow it to be captured by Jupiter's gravity.
NASA's Juno Spacecraft Is Almost at Jupiter
By KENNETH CHANG
Entering orbit on July 4, Juno is to spend 20 months studying the deep interior of Jupiter, uncovering clues about the origin of the solar system.
 
Allene Anderson said her foster dog, Wrigley, a golden retriever, quaked for hours after a storm.
Gabriella Demczuk for The New York Times
By JAN HOFFMAN
A new drug, Sileo, has been developed to help with canine noise phobia. But you play the key role in making your pet more comfortable.
Angelo Di Maria, of the Bronx, had trouble finding a buyer for the lease on a Toyota Prius driven by his father-in-law, right, whose company had given him a Ford pickup.
Edwin J. Torres for The New York Times
By MATT RICHTEL
The single most effective action to help reduce the greenhouse gases that cause climate change? Buy a fuel-efficient car. But Americans are heading in the opposite direction.
Researchers found contagious cancer in soft-shell clams.
Zigmund Leszczynski/Animals Animals/Earth Scenes
By CARL ZIMMER
Until now, infectious cancer was considered something of a fluke in the natural world, observed only in dogs and Tasmanian devils.
Mitochondria in hepatocyte cells of the liver, shown in yellow.
Bsip/UIG, via Getty Images
By STEPH YIN
New research investigates why paternal mitochondria perish in embryos.
LIKE SCIENCE NEWS? DON'T KEEP IT TO YOURSELF
Forward this newsletter to your friends and let them know they can sign up here.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Two Barbary macaque monkey groomed an older female, center, at
What Old Monkeys and Old Humans Have in Common
By JOANNA KLEIN
Monkeys get more picky about certain relationships with age, suggesting biological origins to similar behavior in distantly-related humans.
How You Fight With Your Spouse May Affect Different Body Parts
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
Angry spouses suffered chest pain, while stonewallers felt discomfort in their back and neck muscles.
Jim Gass has undergone stem cell therapy at clinics in Mexico, China, and Argentina to try to recover from a stroke. But doctors found a huge mass with someone else's cells growing aggressively in his lower spine.
Patients Seek Stem Cell Treatments Abroad, With Tragic Consequences
By GINA KOLATA
Unregulated clinics in other countries claim they can treat, even cure, diseases like muscular dystrophy, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and spinal cord injury. Jim Gass spent almost $300,000 hoping to recover from a stroke.
 
The dark stains represent signaling placodes in, from left to right, a lizard, a crocodile and a snake. The features are also found in mammals and birds.
Scales, Feathers and Hair Have a Common Ancestor
By NICHOLAS ST. FLEUR

Q&A
Why do I suffer more pain and itching, and for longer, after a tick bite than after a mosquito sting?
By C. CLAIBORNE RAY

A drop of shampoo slides off a treated piece of polypropylene.
A Slippery Surface Lets Shampoo Slide Out of a Bottle
By STEPH YIN

Personal Health
The Challenges of Male Friendships
By JANE E. BRODY

 
WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU
We'd love your feedback on this newsletter. Please email thoughts and suggestions to sciencenewsletter@nytimes.com.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
FOLLOW SCIENCE Facebook FACEBOOK Twitter @nytscience
Get more NYTimes.com newsletters » | Get unlimited access to NYTimes.com and our NYTimes apps for just $0.99. Subscribe »

ABOUT THIS EMAIL

You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Science Times newsletter.
Copyright 2016 The New York Times Company | 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

Brak komentarzy: