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Scientific American Magazine
| Society & Policy
A venture to profit from a CO2-eating algae bloom riles scientists
By
Sourish Basu
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Sep 16, 2007
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Scientific American Magazine
| Technology
For Blu-ray and HD DVD, encryption and court orders prove futileagain
By
Sourish Basu
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Aug 19, 2007
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News
| More Science
Tiny magnetic atoms of chromium display superfluidity—and the possibility of exotic quantum phases
By
Sourish Basu
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Aug 14, 2007
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News
| Technology
A new technology sniffs an ink's chemical signature in seconds
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 24, 2007
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News
| Environment
Climate change explains shifting rainfall patterns: wet places getting wetter and dry places drier
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 24, 2007
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News
| Technology
In another case of nature-inspired engineering, scientists create robots that take a walk on the wet side
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 18, 2007
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News
| More Science
Mathematicians finally calculate the shape of Escher's muse
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 17, 2007
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News
| More Science
Darwin's Rx: natural selection defeats a male-killing bacterial strain and restores a more balanced sex ratio among Samoan blue moon butterflies
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 13, 2007
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News
| Technology
Ultratight focusing over very short distances beats the best lenses; the discovery could bring the nanoworld up close and into focus
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 12, 2007
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News
| Space
Are bigger, brighter "night shining" clouds a symptom of climate change? A NASA mission aims to find out
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 10, 2007
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News
| More Science
Why does pumpkin seed oil appear red in a bottle but green on a plate?
By
Sourish Basu
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Jul 9, 2007