Hokkaido University
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A new Japanese study simulated interstellar clouds of dust and gas, and managed to produce some of the building blocks of DNA.
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You might think we'd have discovered of all the big animals by now, but Japanese scientists have found a previously-unknown whale species.
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Livestock like sheep and cows are responsible for huge amounts of methane emissions. Now, an international team of researchers has analyzed the gut microbes of different sheep and found clues that may help us curb the problem.
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If there is a subsurface sea on Pluto, why hasn't it frozen solid? According to computer simulations devised by researchers from Japan’s Hokkaido University and elsewhere, it may be that the hypothetical Plutonian sea may remain liquid thanks to an insulating gas layer keeping in the heat.
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It's always helpful if materials let you know when they're under stress, so that changes can be made before catastrophic failures occur. A new polymer is designed to provide such a warning, as it glows when stretched.
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Scientists have found a way to create materials that actually get stronger the more you use them. By mimicking the mechanism that allows living muscles to grow and strengthen after exercise, the polymer breaks down under mechanical stress, then regrows itself into a stronger configuration.
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In places like disaster sites, it's entirely possible that robots' locomotion systems could be damaged. Would that just stop them in their tracks? Perhaps not, if they're anything like a new brittle star-inspired robot.
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They’ve been around for the past 300 million years, outlasting the dinosaurs and outsmarting our attempts to get rid of them. Now, Japanese researchers have revealed yet another reason why we have been unable to put a dent in their populations: female solidarity.
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Scientists at Hokkaido University have developed a new set of hydrogel composites that combine gels with woven fiber fabric to create a material that is five times stronger than carbon steel.
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Faced with an incoming predator, most snails don't really have a lot of options other than to retreat into their shells. But scientists have discovered that certain species won't take such provocations lying down, instead swinging their shells to gain the upper hand on an assailant.
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The bizarre-looking goblin shark lives at great depths, where prey isn't always plentiful. So, how does it manage to catch enough to eat? As scientists recently discovered, it's able to shoot its protruding jaws forward faster than any other fish.
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Japanese researchers have developed a device that can switch between insulating/non-magnet and metallic/magnet states simultaneously by electrochemical reaction at room temperature, with one potential application in flash storage that could double capacity.