Scientific American Magazine Vol 290 Issue 3

Scientific American Magazine

Volume 290, Issue 3

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Features

The Spirit of Exploration

NASA's rover fights the curse of the Angry Red Planet

George Musser

Defusing the Global Warming Time Bomb

Global warming is real, and the consequences are potentially disastrous. Nevertheless, practical actions, which would also yield a cleaner, healthier atmosphere, could slow, and eventually stop, the process

James Hansen

A New Race of Robots

Around the U.S., engineers are finishing one-year crash projects to create robots able to dash 200 miles through the Mojave Desert in a day, unaided by humans. Scientific American tailed the odds-on favorite team for 10 months and found that major innovations in robotics are not enough to win such a contest. Obsession is also required

W. Wayt Gibbs

The Threat of Silent Earthquakes

A lack of rumbling does not necessarily make an earthquake harmless. Some of the quiet types could presage devastating tsunamis or larger, ground-shaking shocks

Peter Cervelli

The Addicted Brain

Drug abuse produces long-term changes in the reward circuitry of the brain. Knowledge of the cellular and molecular details of these adaptations could lead to new treatments for the compulsive behaviors that underlie addiction

Eric J. Nestler and Robert C. Malenka

The Fairest Vote of All

All voting systems have drawbacks. But by taking into account how voters rank candidates, one system gives the truest reflection of the electorate's views

Partha Dasgupta and Eric Maskin

Departments

Erratum

Making and Unmaking Memories

Data Points: March 2004

Brief Points: March 2004

Ask the Experts: March 2004

Fuzzy Logic

Rock Clock

The Major Unsolved Problem in Biology

Grid Speed

None So Blind

Nano Patterning

A Strategy of Containment

Rise of the Black Ghetto

Letters

Working the System II

Gamow -- Darwin -- Faraday

The Climate Leadership Vacuum

Regulation Rag

Passport in Time